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PARENTAL EFFECTS ON SEED DEVELOPMENT AND SEED YIELD IN RAPHANUS RAPHANISTRUM : IMPLICATIONS FOR NATURAL AND SEXUAL SELECTION
Author(s) -
Mazer Susan J.
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.84
H-Index - 199
eISSN - 1558-5646
pISSN - 0014-3820
DOI - 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1987.tb05803.x
Subject(s) - biology , ovule , maternal effect , heritability , pollen , raphanus , reproductive success , genetic variation , offspring , additive genetic effects , natural selection , genetic variability , brassicaceae , selection (genetic algorithm) , botany , genotype , genetics , population , demography , pregnancy , gene , artificial intelligence , sociology , computer science
The possibility that sexual selection operates in angiosperms to effect evolutionary change in polygenic traits affecting male reproductive success requires that there is additive genetic variance for these traits. I applied a half‐sib breeding design to individuals of the annual, hermaphroditic angiosperm, wild radish ( Raphanus raphanistrum : Brassicaceae), to estimate paternal genetic effects on, or, when possible, the narrow‐sense heritability of several quantitative traits influencing male reproductive success. In spite of significant differences among pollen donors with respect to in vitro pollen tube growth rates, I detected no significant additive genetic variance in male performance with respect to the proportion of ovules fertilized, early ovule growth, the number of seeds per fruit, or mean individual seed weight per fruit. In all cases, differences among maternal plants in these traits far exceeded differences among pollen donors. Abortion rates of pollinated flowers and fertilized ovules also differed more among individuals as maternal plants than as pollen donors, suggesting strong maternal control over these processes. Significant maternal phenotypic effects in the absence of paternal genetic or phenotypic effects on reproductive traits may be due to maternal environmental effects, to non‐nuclear or non‐additive maternal genetic effects, or to additive genetic variance in maternal control over offspring development, independent of offspring genotype. While I could not distinguish among these alternatives, it is clear that, in wild radish, the opportunity for natural or sexual selection to effect change in seed weight or seed number per fruit appears to be greater through differences in female performance than through differences in male performance.

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