Species selection maintains self-incompatibility
- PMID: 20966249
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1194513
Species selection maintains self-incompatibility
Abstract
Identifying traits that affect rates of speciation and extinction and, hence, explain differences in species diversity among clades is a major goal of evolutionary biology. Detecting such traits is especially difficult when they undergo frequent transitions between states. Self-incompatibility, the ability of hermaphrodites to enforce outcrossing, is frequently lost in flowering plants, enabling self-fertilization. We show, however, that in the nightshade plant family (Solanaceae), species with functional self-incompatibility diversify at a significantly higher rate than those without it. The apparent short-term advantages of potentially self-fertilizing individuals are therefore offset by strong species selection, which favors obligate outcrossing.
Comment in
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Evolution. The long-term benefits of self-rejection.Science. 2010 Oct 22;330(6003):459-60. doi: 10.1126/science.1198063. Science. 2010. PMID: 20966240 No abstract available.
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