AI Article Synopsis

  • - Hybrid seed inviability (HSI) plays a crucial role in reproductive isolation, impacting speciation by varying in strength among diploid species and potentially influencing ploidy-variable species as well.
  • - The study examined HSI variation within a diploid-autotetraploid species using data from 12 population pairs across three different contact zones, focusing on the effects of crossing direction, ploidy differences, and spatial arrangement on reproductive barriers.
  • - Results revealed significant parent-of-origin effects on endosperm development and hybrid performance, indicating that these variations contribute to interploidy reproductive isolation and the overall fitness of the species, highlighting HSI as a key factor regardless of evolutionary history.

Article Abstract

Hybrid seed inviability (HSI) is an important mechanism of reproductive isolation and speciation. HSI varies in strength among populations of diploid species but it remains to be tested whether similar processes affect natural variation in HSI within ploidy-variable species (triploid block). Here we used extensive endosperm, seed and F -hybrid phenotyping to explore HSI variation within a diploid-autotetraploid species. By leveraging 12 population pairs from three ploidy contact zones, we tested for the effect of interploidy crossing direction (parent of origin), ploidy divergence and spatial arrangement in shaping reproductive barriers in a naturally relevant context. We detected strong parent-of-origin effects on endosperm development, F germination and survival, which was also reflected in the rates of triploid formation in the field. Endosperm cellularization failure was least severe and F -hybrid performance was slightly better in the primary contact zone, with genetically closest diploid and tetraploid lineages. We demonstrated overall strong parent-of-origin effects on HSI in a ploidy variable species, which translate to fitness effects and contribute to interploidy reproductive isolation in a natural context. Subtle intraspecific variation in these traits suggests the fitness consequences of HSI are predominantly a constitutive property of the species regardless of the evolutionary background of its populations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.17357DOI Listing

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