Abstract

Pollen limitation is predicted to be particularly severe in tundra habitats. Numerous reproductive patterns associated with alpine and arctic species, particularly mechanisms associated with reproductive assurance, are suggested to be driven by high levels of pollen limitation. We studied the reproductive ecology of Parrya nudicaulis, a species with relatively large sexual reproductive investment and a wide range of floral pigmentation, in tundra habitats in interior montane Alaska to estimate the degree of pollen limitation. The plants are self-compatible and strongly protandrous, setting almost no seed in the absence of pollinators. Supplemental hand pollinations within pollinator exclusion cages indicated no cage effect on seed production. Floral visitation rates were low in both years of study and particularly infrequent in 2010. A diversity of insects visited P. nudicaulis, though syrphid and muscid flies composed the majority of all visits. Pollen-ovule ratios and levels of heterozygosity are consistent with a mixed mating system. Pollen limitation was severe; hand pollinations increased seed production per plant five-fold. Seed-to-ovule ratios remained low following hand pollinations, indicating resource limitation is likely to also be responsible for curtailing seed set. We suggest that pollen limitation in P. nudicaulis may be the result of selection favoring an overproduction of ovules as a bet-hedging strategy in this environmental context of highly variable pollen receipt.

Highlights

  • Pollen limitation, or the reduction in reproductive success due to an inadequate supply of pollen [1,2,3], is predicted to be strongest in environments where pollinators are low in abundance or where pollinator services are unreliable [4,5,6]

  • We examined the following questions: 1) are floral visitation rates low and correlated with floral pigmentation? 2) Does pollen limitation occur in Parrya nudicaulis and is floral pigmentation related to the level of pollen limitation? Last, 3) does this species have a selfing mating system?

  • Does pollen limitation occur in Parrya nudicaulis?

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Summary

Introduction

The reduction in reproductive success due to an inadequate supply of pollen [1,2,3], is predicted to be strongest in environments where pollinators are low in abundance or where pollinator services are unreliable [4,5,6]. Nowhere else is pollinator service more unreliable and persistently low than in arctic and alpine environments. The pollinating insect assembly in these habitats is skewed toward flies (Diptera) [9,13,15,16,17], which are generally considered inefficient pollinators compared to bees [18,19], but are vital for reproduction in some arctic plant species [20]. A surprising number of arctic species, are reliant on pollinators for sexual reproduction [8,20,29,34,35]

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