TY  - JOUR
T1  - Effective population size mediates the impact of pollination services on pollen limitation
AU  - Cisternas-Fuentes, Anita
AU  - Koski, Matthew H.
N1  - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors.
PY  - 2024/1/10
Y1  - 2024/1/10
N2  - Inadequate pollen receipt limits flowering plant reproduction worldwide. Ecological causes of pollen limitation (PL), like pollinator scarcity and low plant abundance, have been a primary research focus. The genetic diversity of plant populations could impact both quantity and quality components of PL in concert with ecological factors, yet empirical examples are lacking. We evaluated joint effects of ecological factors (flower abundance, pollinator visitation) and genetic effective population size (N E) on PL across 13 populations of the common herb Argentina anserina. We used a histological approach with 5504 styles from 1137 flowers to separate quantity and quality components of PL, and link these to reproductive output. N E and pollinator visitation interacted to shape PL, but N E had stronger direct effects. Effectively smaller populations experienced stronger quantity PL, and controlled crosses in a pollinator-free environment revealed that stigmatic pollen quantity was an intrinsic population-level attribute that increased with N E. Pollinator visitation enhanced pollen quality, but only in effectively larger populations. Quantity and quality PL negatively impacted fruit and seed set, respectively. Results highlight that PL is dictated by plant population genetic diversity in addition to commonly evaluated ecological factors. Efforts to support pollinators will more strongly enhance plant reproduction in genetically diverse populations.
AB  - Inadequate pollen receipt limits flowering plant reproduction worldwide. Ecological causes of pollen limitation (PL), like pollinator scarcity and low plant abundance, have been a primary research focus. The genetic diversity of plant populations could impact both quantity and quality components of PL in concert with ecological factors, yet empirical examples are lacking. We evaluated joint effects of ecological factors (flower abundance, pollinator visitation) and genetic effective population size (N E) on PL across 13 populations of the common herb Argentina anserina. We used a histological approach with 5504 styles from 1137 flowers to separate quantity and quality components of PL, and link these to reproductive output. N E and pollinator visitation interacted to shape PL, but N E had stronger direct effects. Effectively smaller populations experienced stronger quantity PL, and controlled crosses in a pollinator-free environment revealed that stigmatic pollen quantity was an intrinsic population-level attribute that increased with N E. Pollinator visitation enhanced pollen quality, but only in effectively larger populations. Quantity and quality PL negatively impacted fruit and seed set, respectively. Results highlight that PL is dictated by plant population genetic diversity in addition to commonly evaluated ecological factors. Efforts to support pollinators will more strongly enhance plant reproduction in genetically diverse populations.
KW  - clonality
KW  - genetic diversity
KW  - plant reproduction
KW  - pollen limitation
KW  - pollination
KW  - self-incompatibility
UR  - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85182087881&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2  - 10.1098/rspb.2023.1519
DO  - 10.1098/rspb.2023.1519
M3  - Article
C2  - 38196350
AN  - SCOPUS:85182087881
SN  - 0962-8452
VL  - 291
JO  - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
JF  - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
IS  - 2014
M1  - 20231519
ER  -