Glyczne argyrea (Fabaceae), a perennial wild relative ofsoybean, has a dual flowering strategy of both self-fertilized cleistogamous flowers and chasmogamous flowers on the same plant. Using allozyme polymorphisms the frequency and pattern of outcrossing was determined. The genotypes of seeds from each of several fruit (legumes) per plant were analysed by starch gel electrophoresis, and the maternal genotype inferred. The maximum likelihood estimates of outcrossing rate for the chasmogamous flowers averaged 0.38. The observed level of heterozygosity in the adult population (H = 0.25) rompared with the level expected under random mating (h = 0.32) indicated that partial outcrossing was typical of this population. To analyse the mating pattern further, the pollen genotypes of several seeds per legume for pairs of legumes from the same plant were determined. About 35q, of fruit from chasmogamous flowers had no genetically detectable outcross progeny, presumably because they were not cross-pollinated effectively. The majority of the remaining fruit had seed which were of mixed origin (both self-fertilized and outcrossed), suggesting that insect pollination does not preclude self-fertilization. As might be expected from this entomophilous pollination system, the pollen of outcrossed seed within one fruit usually (85% of cross-pollinated legumes) came from one male source. Evidence of pollen carry-over was found in the other legumes. The joint distribution of male sources among the pairs of legumes (paired fruit analysis) showed that non-self sources were shared in 30% of pairs. The probability that two outcrossed seeds from the same fruit would be half-sibs was estimated as 0.15, and for two seeds from different fruit on the same plant as 0.42. There is a hierarchy of genetic identity within and among legumes on the same plant, and on different plants, providing scope for the operation of selection at different levels.
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