Tristyly in the endangered Mascarene Island endemic Hugonia serrata (Linaceae).
1996
Thompson J.D. | Pailler T. | Strasberg D. | Manicacci D.
Tristyly is a rare floral polymorphism known to occur in only five flowering plant families. One unresolved and potential additional case of tristyly concerns the genus Hugonia in the Linaceae. Here we confirm the existence of tristyly in the genus by reporting floral measurements made on Hugonia serrata Lam., an extremely rare species endemic to the Mascarene Islands of La Reunion and Mauritius in the southern Indian Ocean. We conducted an extensive search of all natural habitats on La Reunion Island where the species had been previously reported. Twenty-eight individuals were found, of which nine were in flower. Of the nine flowering individuals five had long-styled flowers with the stigmas placed above the two levels of anthers, three had intermediate length styles with the stigmas placed between the two anther levels, and one had stigmas placed below the two anther levels, i.e., three floral morphs could be identified based on the sequence of stigma and anther positions. Reciprocity and precision indices calculated for sexual organ length in each morph confirm that this variation is well within the range of values observed by previous workers on other tristylous species in other families. Our empirical data confirm the existence of tristyly in the genus Hugonia, thereby raising the number of known families in which tristyly occurs to six. Pollen size, pollen number, and anther length increased slightly with stamen length, but the low number of plants precludes statistical tests of these trends. A bibliographic survey suggests that tristyly may occur in several other species of the genus.
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