Affiliation:
1. Department of Integrative Biology University of Guelph 50 Stone Road E., Guelph Ontario N1G 2W1 Canada
Abstract
AbstractPremiseIntroduced species can influence native congeners through production of hybrids and introgression, but impacts not involving viable hybrids, such as reduced conspecific offspring and increased asexual seed production, are rarely examined. Here we tested for these demographic and reproductive consequences of hybridization between introduced, domesticated apple (Malus domestica) and native crabapple (M. coronaria) in southern Canada.MethodsWe applied four pollination treatments (open,M. coronaria,M. domestica, open +M. coronaria) to focalM. coronariatrees across multiple years and assessed the number and reproductive origins of resulting seeds (hybrid or conspecific endosperm and, for each, sexual or asexual embryo) using flow cytometry.ResultsIn open‐pollinated fruit, 27% of seeds had hybrid endosperm; 52% of embryos were asexual. The number of conspecific embryos (sexual or asexual) per fruit did not decline significantly with increasing hybridization, indicating no seed discounting, but hand pollinations using only domestic apple or crabapple pollen reduced the number of conspecific embryos significantly. Hybridization was not associated with a change in percentage asexual embryos, overall, but there was an increase in asexual embryos in tetraploid seeds, the maternal and most common offspring ploidy.ConclusionsWe conclude that hybridization can influence nativeMalusin ways beyond the production of viable hybrids, with significant implications for population dynamics and genetic structure.
Subject
Plant Science,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics