How does population outcrossing rate influence seed quality? Evidence from a 58-year-old seed tree stand of Pinus massoniana
preprint
OA: closed
Abstract
AbstractInbreeding is thought to be a key adverse factor impacting the genetic quality of seeds in seed production populations and the inbreeding degree (i.e., selfing or outcrossing rate) of seed production populations have been extensively assessed through mating system analysis. The depression effect of inbreeding on seed quality traits in seed production populations under open-pollination conditions has not yet been clearly described. In this study, the open-pollinated seeds were collected from 26 mother trees in a 58-year-old seed tree stand. Three seed quality traits, including thousand-seed weight (TSW), germination rate (GR) and germination potential (GP), were measured, and the seeds from eight of 26 families with significant differences in seed quality traits were genotyped through twelve microsatellite markers. In addition, the seeds and sprouts (germinated seeds) from six families were genotyped to reveal the effect of inbreeding on seed germination. The three seed quality traits significantly differed among families (p<0.001). The multilocus outcrossing rate (tm=0.889) and single-locus outcrossing rate (ts=0.648) of overall seeds indicated apparent selfing (11.1%) and biparental inbreeding (24.0%). The outcrossing rate in the sprout group (tm= 0.919,ts= 0.788) was higher than that in the seed group (tm= 0.833,ts= 0.646), and the difference intsbetween groups was different from zero under the 95% confidence interval (0.024-0.260), suggesting that inbreeding negatively affected seed germination. Linear regression demonstrated that TSW was positively correlated withtmandts, while GR was negatively related totm-tsand positively related tots, implying that seed mass (development) was probably more affected by self-fertilization, but germination capacity was more influenced by biparental inbreeding. Roughly, the inbreeding depression (ID) of TSW was 26.3% with a 0.1 decrease intm, while GR was 8.4% with a 0.1 decrease ints. In summary, these results suggest that the IDs during seed development and the germination stage of Masson pine were nonignorable and that more attention should be given to the establishment and management of Masson pine seed production.
My notes (saved in your browser only)
Citation neighborhood (no data yet)
We don't have any in-corpus citations linked to this paper yet. The paper's references may be in our DB but unresolved to ``paper_id`` (resolution happens at ingest when the cited DOI matches a row we already have). Run the cross-source citation reconcile pass to retry.
Source provenance
- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00