Mechanisms of reproductive isolation between annual and perennial plants ofIncarvillea sinensis

Author:

Lan Wen‐Juan1,Wang Fang‐Yuan1,Barrett Spencer C. H.2,Wang Wen‐Ting3,Ma Yue1,Yang Yang1,Li Nan1,Deng Jun‐Chen145,Bai Wei‐Ning1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Biodiversity Science and Ecological Engineering, College of Life Sciences Beijing Normal University Beijing 100875 China

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Toronto Toronto M5S 3B2 ON Canada

3. School of Mathematics and Computer Science Northwest Minzu University Lanzhou 730030 China

4. Institute of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Biology Jagiellonian University Gronostajowa 7 Kraków 30‐387 Poland

5. Doctoral School of Exact and Natural Sciences Jagiellonian University Gronostajowa 7 Kraków 30‐387 Poland

Abstract

AbstractQuantifying the relative strength of isolating barriers is a major focus of research on plant speciation. Contrasting life histories and mating systems have the potential to limit gene exchange between closely related populations growing in sympatry. However, few studies have quantified reproductive isolating barriers between conspecific annual and perennial populations and their contributions to total reproductive isolation (RI).Incarvillea sinensisLam. (Bignoniaceae) is an insect‐pollinated herb with largely allopatric annual and perennial populations that differ in mating systems. The perennial populations are primarily outcrossing whereas annual populations are predominantly selfing. At a rare sympatric site in northern China we estimated prezygotic and postzygotic barriers to gene exchange between annual and perennial plants and found complete RI between the two life histories. Annuals exhibited significantly higher ecogeographic isolation than perennials whereas perennials experienced more isolation through pollen–pistil interactions than annuals. Crosses between annuals and perennials demonstrated that postzygotic barriers influencing fruit and seed formation, F1germination and survival were negligible for annuals but played a small role for perennials. However, F1hybrids of crosses between annuals and perennials produced no pollen and their ovules were largely sterile. Our study provides insight into the relative importance of prezygotic and postzygotic isolating barriers between closely related annual and perennial populations ofI.sinensisand some of these barriers could have been involved with speciation. Annuals and perennials ofI. sinensisrepresent two biological species and thus deserve to be recognized as distinct taxonomic species.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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