Floral stability, pollination efficiency, and experimental manipulation of the corolla phenotype in Nemophila menziesii (Hydrophyllaceae)
1994
Andersson, S.
The present study examines the degree of phenotypic stability in vegetative and floral traits in a population of the annual, self-compatible, and protandrous Nemophila menziesii (Hydrophyllaceae) and examines whether local pollinators select for a uniform floral phenotype in this population. I found a strong positive association between flower number, leaf size, shoot length, and pedicel length, implying a general effect of overall plant vigor on this suite of traits, while characters reflecting corolla shape were phenotypically stable across a broad range of plant sizes. However, results of a manipulative experiment indicate that individual flowers maintain high pollination success despite drastic changes in the size and shape of the corolla. This suggests that pollinator-mediated selection does not directly favor floral stability in N. menziesii or that selection was weak during the course of this study. Seed number per flower was positively correlated with plant size, which varied greatly from one patch to another.
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