Ecological implications of reduced pollen deposition in alpine plants: a case study using a dominant cushion plant species

F1000Res. 2014 Jun 19:3:130. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.4382.1. eCollection 2014.

Abstract

The reproductive assurance hypothesis states that self-incompatible female plants must produce twice the number of seeds relative to their self-compatible hermaphroditic counterparts to persist in gynodioecious populations. This is a viable life-history strategy, provided that pollination rates are sufficiently high. However, reduced pollination rates in alpine plants are likely due to climate induced plant-pollinator mismatches and general declines in pollinators. Using a gynodioecious population of the dominant plant Silene acaulis (Caryophyllaceae), we tested the reproductive assurance hypothesis and also the stress gradient hypothesis with a series of pollinator exclusion trials and extensive measurements of subsequent reproductive output (gender ratio, plant size, percent fruit-set, fruit weight, seeds per fruit, total seeds, seed weight, and seed germination). The reproductive assurance hypothesis was supported with female plants being more sensitive to and less likely to be viable under reductions in pollination rates. These findings are the first to show that the stress gradient hypothesis is also supported under a gradient of pollen supply instead of environmental limitations. Beneficiary abundance was negatively correlated to percent fruit-set under current pollen supply, but became positive under reduced pollen supply suggesting that there are important plant-plant-pollinator interactions related to reproduction in these alpine plant species.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by an NSERC DG and an NSERC Canadian Pollination Initiative (CANPOLIN) grant to CJL. AR was funded by an Ontario Graduate Scholarship and two York University Faculty of Graduate Studies research grants. RH was funded by NSERC URSA. OM was funded through York University Department of Biology.