THE USE OF ISOENZYME MARKERS TO DETERMINE POLLEN FLOW AND SEED PATERNITY MEDIATED BY APIS-MELLIFERA AND BOMBUS SPP. IN TRIFOLIUM-REPENS, A SELF-INCOMPATIBLE PLANT-SPECIES

Citation
Tpt. Michaelsonyeates et al., THE USE OF ISOENZYME MARKERS TO DETERMINE POLLEN FLOW AND SEED PATERNITY MEDIATED BY APIS-MELLIFERA AND BOMBUS SPP. IN TRIFOLIUM-REPENS, A SELF-INCOMPATIBLE PLANT-SPECIES, Journal of Apicultural Research, 36(2), 1997, pp. 57-62
Citations number
16
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology
ISSN journal
00218839
Volume
36
Issue
2
Year of publication
1997
Pages
57 - 62
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8839(1997)36:2<57:TUOIMT>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
Five fixed isoenzyme selections, within the white clover (Trifolium re pens) cultivar S100, were used as genetic markers in a study of the ef fectiveness of bees of different genera as pollen vectors. Five plants of each of the five selections were cloned to provide two identical p lots of 25 plants with equal proportions of the five different pollen donor plants. Pollen flow within each plot, mediated by honey bees, Ap is mellifera, and bumble bees, Bombus spp., was determined on an indiv idual inflorescence basis in plots containing the different pollinator species. The movement between plants of the various pollen types was monitored by determining the paternity of the seedlings that resulted following pollination and fertilization using starch gel electrophores is. Variation was found in the proportions of the different paternal d onors to sire seed within pods. Following pollination by Apis, c. 50% of pods contained seed from ovules fertilized by pollen from two diffe rent selections, c. 25% with that from three or four selections and no ne with that from only one. Following pollination by Bombus, c. 30% of pods contained seed from ovules fertilized by pollen from two selecti ons, c. 50% with that from three selections and c. 10% with that from one or four. Within an inflorescence, pollination by both Apis and Bom bus resulted in c. 70% of seed having the same paternity. Within indiv idual pods, one paternal selection dominated; in pods containing seeds of two, three or four paternities the dominant paternal selection acc ounted for 75%, 60% and 60%, respectively, following pollination by Ap is, and 75%, 64% and 63%, respectively, following pollination by Bombu s. The results are discussed in relation to the foraging behaviour of bees, pollen carryover and gene flow.