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Australian Journal of Botany Australian Journal of Botany Society
Southern hemisphere botanical ecosystems
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Preferential Outcrossing in Eucalyptus regnans F. Muell

AR Griffin, GF Moran and YJ Fripp

Australian Journal of Botany 35(4) 465 - 475
Published: 1987

Abstract

Seed production characteristics of Eucalyptus regnans following self (S), outcross (O), (S+O ) and open pollination were investigated as a contribution to understanding of breeding system control in this species.

All five trees tested produced seed after self-pollination, although yield was reduced relative to outcrossing. Isozyme analysis was used to determine paternity of individual seeds produced by polli- nation with a 1 : 1 mixture of S and 0 pollens. Preferential outcrossing was demonstrated, with an average of 81% of seeds being outcrosses. S and 0 seeds were also found within the same open- pollinated capsules, confirming the experimental observation that receipt of outcross pollen does not per se preclude self-fertilisation.

The independent probabilities of survival of S and 0 embryos, as determined from seed yield per 100 flowers after separate S and 0 pollination, accounted for much of the preferential outcrossing effect. However, some trees produced more outcrosses than expected and competitive interaction of embryo genotypes within a capsule cannot be discounted.

Following open pollination, samples from 15 trees averaged 16.7 ovules and 1.48 full seeds per capsule, giving a mean seed : ovule ratio of 9.0%. The modal number of seeds per capsule was 1 and the maximum 9, while 21% of capsules yielded no full seeds.

These observations and experiments suggest post-fertilisation control of the breeding system, dependent upon both embryo genotype and maternal resource allocation.

https://doi.org/10.1071/BT9870465

© CSIRO 1987

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