Reproductive Biology and Pollination Ecology of Fritillaria michailovskyi Fomin (Liliaceae), Endemic to East Anatolia (Turkey)

Author:

Aslay Meral1,Yıldız Faruk2ORCID,Kaya Ozkan1ORCID,Bita-Nicolae Claudia3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Erzincan Horticultural Research Institute, Republic of Turkey Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, 24060 Erzincan, Turkey

2. Institute of Science, Erzincan Binali Yıldırım University, 24002 Erzincan, Turkey

3. Ecology, Taxonomy & Nature Conservation Department, Institute of Biology Bucharest, Romanian Academy, 060031 Bucharest, Romania

Abstract

Fritillaria is highly endangered in their natural habitats, and these species are perennial bulbous plants with an important medicinal and ornamental value whose reproductive strategies and adaptive evolution mechanisms are still not fully clear. Therefore, the reproductive strategies of endemic species, like Fritillaria michailovskyi Fomin are important to detect the community structure and the diversity patterns of ornamental plants. The current paper on the reproductive strategy of F. michailovskyi, a rare endemic species, was carried out at the Erzincan Horticultural Research Institute, Turkey. Our results indicate that the flowering stages of F. michailovskyi may be divided into eight phases. According to pollination experiments and the pollen/ovule ratio, and the self-incompatibility index (SII) in an ex-situ population, F. michailovskyi indicated high levels of xenogamy and self-incompatibility. It was determined that the pollination of F. michailovskyi mostly depended on pollen vectors, and the effective pollinators of F. michailovskyi were Apis mellifera and Bombus terrestris. In addition, average seed number, seed germination, and average seed viability were found as 144, 46%, and 67%, respectively. The stigma receptivity, pollen grains, and pollen viability were detected as 83%, 252,000, and 95%, respectively. Our study is the first report providing a detailed explanation of the reproductive strategy of this rare endemic species, which could aid in the genetic evolution and conservation of this valuable taxa.

Funder

General Directorate of Agricultural Research and Policies, Scientific Research Project-SRP

TUBITAK

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Ecological Modeling,Ecology

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