Defining features of age-specific fertility and seed quality in senescing indeterminate annuals
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Abstract:
PREMISE OF THE STUDY: A trade- off between fertility and offspring viability underpins
plant reproductive response to sub- optimal environmental conditions. Senescence involves
internal resource limitation, and it is a sub- optimal body condition. We tested if senescence
affects age- specific fertility and seed viability (quality) in indeterminate annuals.
METHODS: Fertility in individual pods on the monopodial indeterminate inflorescence of
Arabidopsis thaliana and its big- seeded relative Brassica nigra was quantified. The reproductive
phase was divided into three phases: (1) early-senescence (initial flowers) (2) mid-senescence
and (3) late-senescence (wilting leaves). Seed- viability probability as a function of pod position
on the inflorescence (a proxy for parent's age) and seed position within pod was verified by
germination tests in Brassica and then analysed using a binomial logistic regression model.KEY RESULTS: Age- specific fertility increased gradually, peaked, and then declined
significantly during senescence in Arabidopsis and Brassica. Acropetal size distribution
of rosette leaves was similar to that of pods (age- specific fertility) in Arabidopsis. Seeds
positioned closest to stigma tended to be heavier and more viable than others in highly
fertile pods, characteristic of mid- senescence phase in Brassica. Pod position (parent's age)
was a significant predictor of seed- viability probability or seed quality, which improved in
old and senescing Brassica.
CONCLUSIONS: High viability probability of seeds produced in low- fertility pods during
late- senescence phase suggests weakening of maternal control over seed- size optimization
(bigger, fewer, and better seeds) in internally resource- depleted older parent plants. Proximity
to stigma can increase seed quality. The unexpected increase in fertility and seed viability
during early- senescence phase is likely due to highly conserved developmental constraints
on leaf and pod phenotype. Indeterminate annuals can shed light on fertility, offspring quality
and senescence relationships in all plants that reproduce sexually and indeterminately.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
age-specific fertility; Brassicaceae; maternal control; monopodial inflorescence; offspring quality; phenotype; plant senescence; polycarpy; precision harvest; resource availability; seed viability; trade-offs
Elenco autori:
KAIDALA GANESHA, SRIKANTA DANI
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