Journal article

Neutral hybridization can overcome a strong Allee effect by improving pollination quality

J Bouhours, MB Mesgaran, RD Cousens, MA Lewis

Theoretical Ecology | SPRINGER HEIDELBERG | Published : 2017

Abstract

Small populations of plant species can be susceptible to demographic Allee effects mainly due to pollen limitation. Although sympatry with a common, co-flowering species may somewhat alleviate the problem of pollinator visitation (pollination quantity), the interspecific pollen transfer, IPT, (pollination quality) may remain a barrier to reproduction in small populations such as new introductions. However, if the two species are crosscompatible, our hypothesis is that neutral hybridization can help the small founding population overcome the Allee effect by improving the quality of pollination. We tested this hypothesis by using a novel modelling approach based on the theory of kinetic reacti..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Canada Research Chairs


Funding Acknowledgements

We gratefully acknowledge funding for this project from Australian Research Council Discovery Grant DP140100608 to RDC and MAL. JB was funded by a PIMS Post-doctoral Fellowship and the University of Alberta. MAL gratefully acknowledges additional funding from the Natural Sciences Research Council of Canada and the Canada Research Chairs programme. We thank colleagues in the Lewis Lab for helpful feedback and suggestions on the research.