Abstract

Progeny from chasmogamous (CH) and cleistogamous (CL) flowers of the grass Danthonia spicata were raised in their native habitat and in the greenhouse in order to determine how genetic variation was distributed among families and between CH and CL progeny within families. Twelve quantitative characters were measured on clones from individuals known to have arisen from either CH or CL flowers on a particular plant. Significant genetic variation existed for all characters measured. Most genetic variation was between families and two morphologically similar groups of families were identified. Relatively little genetic variation was found within families (approximately 5% of the total phenotypic variance). In field-raised plants, variance component analysis suggested that CL progeny were genetically more similar to each other than were CH progeny from the same plant. Levene's test of the average deviation of CH and CL progenies from their group means was nonsignificant but suggested there was a trend (0.05 < P < 0.10) for CH progeny to be more variable than CL progeny in the field but less variable in the greenhouse. The amount and distribution of genetic variation in the study population indicates that selective differentials would be larger among families than within families.

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