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      Characteristics of pollen production in a population of New Zealand snow-tussock grass (Chionochloa pallens Zotov)

      New Phytologist
      Wiley

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          Most cited references19

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          The biology of heterostyly

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            Altitudinal variation in stomatal conductance, nitrogen content and leaf anatomy in different plant life forms in New Zealand

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              Sexual reproduction and variation in floral morphology in an ephemeral vernal lily, Eyythronium americanum.

              In a riparian population of Erythronium americanum (Liliaceae) in central New Jersey, experimentally self-pollinated plant produced markedly fewer fruit and fewer seeds per fruit than hand-outcrossed and open pollinated plants, even though differences were not evident between pollen tubes that penetrated stigmas from self or foreign pollen. This weak self-compatibility and a positive relation between the percentage of seeds set by outcrossed plants and the distance between pollen donor and recipient plants indicate that this population could be susceptible to inbreeding depression.Limited resources for seed development apparently constrained maximal seed production, based on low seed set (40.6%) by hand-pollinated plants and positive correlations for these plants between plant size and the number and size of seeds set. In contrast, naturally-pollinated plants set a smaller proportion of their ovules, suggesting that limited pollinator service reduced the quantity of seeds produced in this population. Free-foraging bees usually removed more than half of the available pollen in a single visit, so that individual plants probably have few opportunities to disseminate their pollen.Even though sexually reproductive ramets produce only a single flower per year, less than a third of variation in floral morphology is associated with variation in plant size. Within the flower, the sizes of some closely associated structures, such as the style and ovary, and the anthers and filaments, vary essentially independently of one another. Production of nectar and pollen, the ultimate attractors of pollinating insects, was positively correlated with flower size.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                New Phytologist
                New Phytol
                Wiley
                0028-646X
                1469-8137
                November 1990
                November 1990
                : 116
                : 3
                : 555-562
                Article
                10.1111/j.1469-8137.1990.tb00539.x
                80ff25e4-7386-4be1-a7c0-2eddbf2e2f05
                © 1990

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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