Floral Biology, Breeding System and Conservation Implications for the Azorean Endemic <i>Azorina vidalii</i> (Campanulaceae)

This study investigates the seasonal and floral phenology, breeding strategies, and floral morphology of <i>Azorina vidalii</i>, an Azorean endemic Campanulaceae with hermaphroditic, protandrous flowers, dichogamy and secondary pollen presentation. Seasonal phenology was recorded in four...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rúben M. Correia Rego, Ana Delaunay Caperta, Mónica Moura, Luís Silva, Guilherme Roxo, Roberto Resendes, Maria Olangua-Corral
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-06-01
Series:Plants
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2223-7747/14/12/1774
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Summary:This study investigates the seasonal and floral phenology, breeding strategies, and floral morphology of <i>Azorina vidalii</i>, an Azorean endemic Campanulaceae with hermaphroditic, protandrous flowers, dichogamy and secondary pollen presentation. Seasonal phenology was recorded in four field populations and floral phenology in a garden population. Reproductive strategies were assessed via controlled hand pollinations in one field population. Floral morphometrics were analysed using 23 floral and five pollen traits from 121 flowers across fourteen populations throughout the Azores archipelago. Non-parametric and parametric tests, discriminant analysis, and reproductive indices were used to infer answers to this study’s goals. Results showed that temperature and humidity influenced vegetative and reproductive phenophases. The male phase was shorter than the female, likely due to pollen dynamics, and some functional overlap suggested incomplete dichogamy. Geographic variation in floral traits indicated morphological differentiation across subarchipelagos, presumably linked to environmental factors or isolation. Reproductive indices suggested a mixed mating system, partial self–incompatibility and signs of inbreeding depression. Fertilisation was absent without pollinators, and spontaneous selfing was excluded due to an absence of pollen–pistil contact during stigma retraction. These findings contribute to understanding the reproductive biology and morphologic variation in <i>A. vidalii</i>. The implications of these findings for the conservation of this insular plant are discussed.
ISSN:2223-7747