Selfing and correlated paternity in relation to pollen management in western red cedar seed orchards

Author:

Ritland Kermit1,Miscampbell Allyson1,Van Niejenhuis Annette2,Brown Patti3,Russell John4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, 2424 Main Mall, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.

2. Western Forest Products Inc., 118-1334 Island Highway, Campbell River, BC V9W 8C9, Canada.

3. Canadian Forest Products Inc., 4858 Skylark Rd., Sechelt, BC V0N 3A2, Canada.

4. Cowichan Lake Research Station, Box 335, Mesachie Lake, BC V0R 2N0, Canada.

Abstract

We used microsatellite genetic markers to evaluate the mating system of western red cedar (Thuja plicata Donn ex D. Don) under various seed orchard pollen management schemes. We primarily examined whether supplemental mass pollination (SMP) can reduce the observed selfing rates. Pollen blowing and “hooding” were also examined in smaller tests. Only SMP was consistently effective in reducing the selfing rate, from 30% to 20%. The correlation of paternity was quite high (60%–90%) in two of three orchards, and in these two orchards the application of SMP reduced this correlation by about 10% as well. The correlation of paternity is the fraction of full-sibling vs. half-sibling progeny, and unbiased estimates can be obtained with few loci, even single loci, in contrast to other types of paternity analysis. We also find the microsatellite amplicon sizes should be pooled into “bins” of 2–4 nucleotides, owing to unintended errors of assay; otherwise the estimates are biased. This new feature of mating system estimation was incorporated into the computer program MLTR.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference31 articles.

1. Adams, W.T., and Birkes, D.S. 1991. Estimating mating patterns in forest tree populations.InBiochemical markers in the population genetics of forest trees.Edited byM. Fineschi, M. Malvolti, F. Cannata, and H.H. Hattemer. SPB Academic Publishing, The Hague, the Netherlands. pp. 157–172.

2. Reliable selfing rate estimates from imperfect population genetic data

3. Marker-based estimates of between and within population kinships for the conservation of genetic diversity

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