Abstract

ABSTRACT Widely distributed organisms face different ecological scenarios throughout their range, which can potentially lead to micro-evolutionary differentiation at specific localities. Mating systems of animal pollinated plants are supposed to evolve in response to the availability of local pollinators, with consequent changes in flower morphology. We tested the relationship among pollination , mating system, and flower morphology over a large spatial scale in Brazilian savannas using the tree Curatella americana (Dilleniaceae). We compared fruit set with and without pollinators in the field, and analyzed pollen tube growth from self- and cross-pollinated flowers in different populations. Populations with higher natural fruit set also had lower fruit set in bagged flowers, suggesting stronger barriers to self-fertilization. Furthermore, higher levels of autogamy in field experiments were associated with more pollen tubes reaching ovules in self-pollinated flowers. Morphometric studies of floral and leaf traits indicate closer-set reproductive organs, larger stigmas and smaller anthers in populations with more autogamy. We show that the spatial variation in mating system, flower morphology and pollination previously described for herbs also applies to long-lived, perennial tropical trees, thus reemphasizing that mating systems are a population-based attribute that vary according to the ecological scenario where the plants occur.

Highlights

  • The interactions established between organisms can vary greatly throughout space and time (Thompson 2005)

  • Mating systems of animal pollinated plants are supposed to evolve in response to the availability of local pollinators, with consequent changes in flower morphology

  • We show that the spatial variation in mating system, flower morphology and pollination previously described for herbs applies to long-lived, perennial tropical trees, reemphasizing that mating systems are a population-based attribute that vary according to the ecological scenario where the plants occur

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Summary

Introduction

The interactions established between organisms can vary greatly throughout space and time (Thompson 2005). The resulting pollination interactions can vary from specialist to generalist for both plants and animals, and may have strong implications for the evolution of plant mating systems (Gómez 2002; Dart et al 2012; Barrett 2013). The mating system may vary within a species’ range due to trade-offs between genetic variability, promoted by cross-pollination, and reproductive assurance from selfpollination, which vary in response to different ecological scenarios throughout space and time (Barrett et al 1989; Moeller 2006; Opedal et al 2016). Some herb species with mixed mating systems show different levels of autogamy throughout their ranges (Kalisz & Vogler 2003; Moeller 2006)

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