Abstract

Distyly is a widespread floral polymorphism characterized by the flowers within a population showing reciprocal placement of the anthers and stigma. Darwin hypothesizes that distyly evolves to promote precise pollen transfer between morphs. Primula chungensis exhibits two types of anther heights, and these two types of anthers show pollen of two different size classes. To understand whether the stigma could capture more pollen grains from the anthers of the pollen donor as the separation between the stigma of pollen receiver and the anther of pollen donor decreased, the present research assessed the source of the pollen load in a series of open-pollinated flowers with continuous variation of style lengths. Individuals with continuous variation of style length were tagged, and the selected flowers in the tagged plants were emasculated the day before dehiscence. The stigma of the emasculated flowers was fixed in fuchsin gel at the end of blooming. We assessed the pollen sources on each stigma by taking photos under a microscope and measured the diameter of each conspecific pollen grain with ImageJ. We found that a shorter distance from the stigmas to the anthers of a pollen donor gave the flower a higher capacity to receive pollen from those anthers. Our result provides a new evidence that distyly could promote the pollen transfer between morphs, which is consistent with Darwin’s hypothesis of disassortative pollination. An alternative hypothesis for the evolution of distyly (e.g. selfing avoidance) might also be true, but less likely, because self-incompatibility would greatly avoid self-fertilization for many distylous species.

Highlights

  • Is a classic floral polymorphism that is characterized by flowers showing reciprocal placements of male and female organs between two or three morphs in a population (Ganders 1979; Barrett1990; Lloyd and Webb 1992a; Barrett and Shore 2008; Barrett 2013)

  • Pollen size of P. chungensis in population ES could be grouped into two categories, and the same was there for the anther height (Fig. 4)

  • We found that most conspecific pollen grains were deposited on stigmas that were similar in height to the anther height of pollen donors (Fig. 6A)

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Summary

Introduction

Is a classic floral polymorphism that is characterized by flowers showing reciprocal placements of male and female organs between two (distyly) or three morphs (tristyly) in a population (Ganders 1979; Barrett1990; Lloyd and Webb 1992a; Barrett and Shore 2008; Barrett 2013). The long-styled morph shows a wider corolla and shorter floral tube than the short-styled morph, and the pollen grains from the longstyled morph are significantly smaller than those of the short-styled morph. These two morphs differ with respect to other traits such as pollen production, the width of the stigma and the length of the stigmatic papilla (Darwin 1877; Ganders 1976; Dulberger 1992; Ree 1997). Pollination between different morphs is defined as ‘legitimate pollination’; in contrast, intra-flower and intra-morph pollination are known as ‘illegitimate pollination’

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