Popis: |
Amphicarphic species produce both aboveground and belowground seeds; the belowground seeds have been proposed to be an adaptation to disturbed sites because they are protected belowground, enabling them to persist and recolonize a site after disturbance. However, it is unknown whether such seeds indeed serve as the main colonizers after a disturbance. The amphicarpic species Polygala lewtonii is endemic to fire-prone Florida sandhill and scrub and is among only a few species with three flower types (aboveground chasmogamous flowers and both above and belowground cleistogamous flowers). The goal of this study was to understand whether recolonization of sites by P. lewtonii was accomplished primarily through germination of belowground seed. First, we quantified the outcrossing rate in seeds produced by aboveground chasmogamous flowers to determine whether we could detect differences in colonization of between seeds produced aboveground vs. belowground. Approximately 25% of seeds from aboveground chasmogamous flowers showed evidence of cross pollination and the seeds showed greater heterozygosity and lower inbreeding coefficients than pure selfing, indicating that it is possible to differentiate between selfed and non-selfed seed types in postfire colonization. Second, we analyzed genetic diversity, inbreeding, and genetic structure of the populations before and after a prescribed fire. If heterozygosity and admixture increased, and spatial population genetic structure and inbreeding decreased, this would indicate that fire promoted germination of outcrossed seed from aboveground flowers. However, inbreeding increased and spatial genetic structure and admixture decreased after fire, suggesting that selfed seed produced by belowground flowers predominantly recolonized the site after fire. Thus, amphicarpy is a powerful adaptation to fire-maintained environments by producing seeds that are well suited to the range of conditions presented by a highly variable, disturbance prone habitat. |