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What prevents hybridisation in Celmisia?Gosden, Jane Louise January 2012 (has links)
Hybrids are common, being found in about 25% of all plant species, but the isolating barriers which
preserve species integrity are poorly studied. I investigated this question in the large New Zealand
genus Celmisia Cass. (Asteraceae), which hybridises readily in cultivation, but wild hybrids are
relatively rare. My study quantitatively tests four potential reproductive isolating barriers in 12
sympatric species of Celmisia found in the Craigieburn Range, inland Canterbury, New Zealand. I
examined two potential prezygotic reproductive isolating barriers (flowering phenology and pollinator
specialisation), and two potential postzygotic barriers (pre-dispersal seed predation and hybrid seed
germination). I used null models to test whether Celmisia species had temporally segregated
flowering times, and found that some Celmisia are temporally segregated and thus less likely to form
hybrids. I used experimental pair-wise flowering arrays to observe insect visitation to six different
Celmisia species pairs. While I found no difference in the overall pollinator community, several insect
families showed preferences for some Celmisia species. Furthermore, I found that subtle floral
character differences were driving these insect preferences. In particular, I found scape height to be
positively associated with insect visitation with taller Celmisia being favoured over shorter species.
Insect preferences did not translate into strong floral constancy, therefore indicating that Celmisia
flower visitors are likely to be a weak barrier to hybridisation. I reared a range of insect seed predators
from field-collected capitula of the hybrid C. x pseudolyallii and both parent species (C. lyallii and C.
spectabilis). There was no overall difference in the number of seed-predators per capitulum between
hybrid and parent Celmisia taxa. I collected and sowed seeds from three Celmisia hybrids and their
parent species in order to test whether hybrids were less fertile than their parent species. I found no
evidence to suggest that the seeds of hybrids had lower germination success than those of their
parents. Overall I found evidence for only weak prezygotic reproductive isolation and no evidence for
postzygotic isolation in the four barriers I examined in Celmisia.
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