Failure of sexual reproduction found in micropropagated critically endangered plants prior to reintroduction: A cautionary tale

Micropropagation is a useful technique for ex situ multiplication and restoration of critically endangered plant species, but the sexual reproductive behaviour of micropropagated plants is seldom evaluated prior to reintroduction. We examined the critically endangered species Rulingia sp. 'Trig...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ye, Q., Bunn, E., Dixon, Kingsley
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41894
_version_ 1848756270229618688
author Ye, Q.
Bunn, E.
Dixon, Kingsley
author_facet Ye, Q.
Bunn, E.
Dixon, Kingsley
author_sort Ye, Q.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Micropropagation is a useful technique for ex situ multiplication and restoration of critically endangered plant species, but the sexual reproductive behaviour of micropropagated plants is seldom evaluated prior to reintroduction. We examined the critically endangered species Rulingia sp. 'Trigwell Bridge', with only three remaining plants known in the wild, as a model case to examine this issue. Abnormalities in micropropagated plants of this species related to four floral traits (lengths of sepals, petals and anthers and width of anthers). The number of pollen grains per flower of abnormal individuals was lower than in plants with apparently normal flowers (wild types), but not significantly so (P=0.068). Pollen viability for the abnormal plant (0.87±0.26%) was significantly lower than for the plants exhibiting wild-type floral morphology (45.42±4.47%). Experimental manipulations were used to examine the mating behaviour of normal and abnormal plants. The results showed that both male and female reproductive failure was linked to individuals exhibiting abnormal flowering attributes. Such aberrant reproductive performance in a micropropagated rare species predicates caution when using micropropagated plants in reintroduction programmes, highlighting the importance of screening for reproductive normality prior to release of micropropagated plants (especially for critically endangered species where reliance on in vitro propagation methods is often a necessity).
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:09:32Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-41894
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:09:32Z
publishDate 2011
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-418942017-09-13T14:16:25Z Failure of sexual reproduction found in micropropagated critically endangered plants prior to reintroduction: A cautionary tale Ye, Q. Bunn, E. Dixon, Kingsley Micropropagation is a useful technique for ex situ multiplication and restoration of critically endangered plant species, but the sexual reproductive behaviour of micropropagated plants is seldom evaluated prior to reintroduction. We examined the critically endangered species Rulingia sp. 'Trigwell Bridge', with only three remaining plants known in the wild, as a model case to examine this issue. Abnormalities in micropropagated plants of this species related to four floral traits (lengths of sepals, petals and anthers and width of anthers). The number of pollen grains per flower of abnormal individuals was lower than in plants with apparently normal flowers (wild types), but not significantly so (P=0.068). Pollen viability for the abnormal plant (0.87±0.26%) was significantly lower than for the plants exhibiting wild-type floral morphology (45.42±4.47%). Experimental manipulations were used to examine the mating behaviour of normal and abnormal plants. The results showed that both male and female reproductive failure was linked to individuals exhibiting abnormal flowering attributes. Such aberrant reproductive performance in a micropropagated rare species predicates caution when using micropropagated plants in reintroduction programmes, highlighting the importance of screening for reproductive normality prior to release of micropropagated plants (especially for critically endangered species where reliance on in vitro propagation methods is often a necessity). 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41894 10.1111/j.1095-8339.2010.01110.x unknown
spellingShingle Ye, Q.
Bunn, E.
Dixon, Kingsley
Failure of sexual reproduction found in micropropagated critically endangered plants prior to reintroduction: A cautionary tale
title Failure of sexual reproduction found in micropropagated critically endangered plants prior to reintroduction: A cautionary tale
title_full Failure of sexual reproduction found in micropropagated critically endangered plants prior to reintroduction: A cautionary tale
title_fullStr Failure of sexual reproduction found in micropropagated critically endangered plants prior to reintroduction: A cautionary tale
title_full_unstemmed Failure of sexual reproduction found in micropropagated critically endangered plants prior to reintroduction: A cautionary tale
title_short Failure of sexual reproduction found in micropropagated critically endangered plants prior to reintroduction: A cautionary tale
title_sort failure of sexual reproduction found in micropropagated critically endangered plants prior to reintroduction: a cautionary tale
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41894