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Autogamy or self-fertilization refers to the fusion of two gametes that come from one individual. Autogamy is predominantly observed in the form of self-pollination, a reproductive mechanism employed by many flowering plants. However, species of protists have also been observed using autogamy as a means of reproduction. Flowering plants engage in autogamy regularly, while the protists that engage in autogamy only do so in stressful environments.

Occurrence

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Protists

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Paramecium aurelia

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Paramecium aurelia is the most commonly studied protozoan for autogamy. Similar to other unicellular organisms, Paramecium aurelia typically reproduce asexually via binary fission or sexually via cross-fertilization. However, studies have shown that when put under nutritional stress, Paramecium aurelia will undergo meiosis and subsequent fusion of gametic-like nuclei.[1] This process, defined as hemixis, a chromosomal rearrangement process, takes place in a number of steps. First, the two micronuclei of P. aurelia enlarge and divide two times to form eight nuclei. Some of these daughter nuclei will continue to divide to create potential future gametic nuclei. Of these potential gametic nuclei, one will divide two more times. Of the four daughter nuclei arising from this step, two of them become anlagen, or cells that will form part of the new organism. The other two daughter nuclei become the gametic micronuclei that will undergo autogamous self-fertilization.[2] These nuclear divisions are observed mainly when the P. aurelia is put under nutritional stress. Research shows that P. aurelia undergo autogamy synchronously with other individuals of the same species.[3]

Clonal aging and rejuvenation

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In Paramecium tetraurelia, vitality declines over the course of successive asexual cell divisions by binary fission. Clonal aging is associated with a dramatic increase in DNA damage.[4][5][6] When paramecia that have experienced clonal aging undergo meiosis, either during conjugation or automixis, the old macronucleus disintegrates and a new macronucleus is formed by replication of the micronuclear DNA that had just experienced meiosis followed by syngamy. These paramecia are rejuvenated in the sense of having a restored clonal lifespan. Thus it appears that clonal aging is due in large part to the progressive accumulation of DNA damage, and that rejuvenation is due to repair of DNA damage during meiosis that occurs in the micronucleus during conjugation or automixis and reestablishment of the macronucleus by replication of the newly repaired micronuclear DNA.[7]

Tetrahymena rostrata

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Similar to Paramecium aurelia, the parasitic ciliate Tetrahymena rostrata has also been shown to engage in meiosis, autogamy and development of new macronuclei when placed under nutritional stress.[8] Due to the degeneration and remodeling of genetic information that occurs in autogamy, genetic variability arises and possibly increases an offspring's chances of survival in stressful environments.[9]

Allogromia laticollaris

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Allogromia laticollaris is perhaps the best-studied foraminiferan amoeboid for autogamy. A. laticollaris can alternate between sexual reproduction via cross-fertilization and asexual reproduction via binary fission. The details of the life cycle of A. laticollaris are unknown, but similar to Paramecium aurelia, A. laticollaris is also shown to sometimes defer to autogamous behavior when placed in nutritional stress. As seen in Paramecium, there is some nuclear dimorphism observed in A. laticollaris. There are often observations of macronuclei and chromosomal fragments coexisting in A. laticollaris. This is indicative of nuclear and chromosomal degeneration, a process similar to the subdivisions observed in P. aurelia. Multiple generations of haploid A. laticollaris individuals can exist before autogamy actually takes place.[10] The autogamous behavior in A. laticollaris has the added consequence of giving rise to daughter cells that are substantially smaller than those rising from binary fission.[11] It is hypothesized that this is a survival mechanism employed when the cell is in stressful environments, and thus not able to allocate all resources to creating offspring. If a cell was under nutritional stress and not able to function regularly, there would be a strong possibility of its offspring's fitness being sub-par.[12]

Self-pollination in flowering plants

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About 10–15% of flowering plants are predominantly self-fertilizing.[13] Self-pollination is an example of autogamy that occurs in flowering plants. Self-pollination occurs when the sperm in the pollen from the stamen of a plant goes to the carpels of that same plant and fertilizes the egg cell present. Self-pollination can either be done completely autogamously or geitonogamously. In the former, the egg and sperm cells that unite come from the same flower. In the latter, the sperm and egg cells can come from a different flower on the same plant. While the latter method does blur the lines between autogamous self-fertilization and normal sexual reproduction, it is still considered autogamous self-fertilization.[14]

Self-pollination can lead to inbreeding depression due to expression of deleterious recessive mutations.[15] Meiosis followed by self-pollination results in little genetic variation, raising the question of how meiosis in self-pollinating plants is adaptively maintained over an extended period in preference to a less complicated and less costly asexual ameiotic process for producing progeny. For instance, Arabidopsis thaliana is a predominantly self-pollinating plant that has an outcrossing rate in the wild estimated at less than 0.3%,[16] and self-pollination appears to have evolved roughly a million years ago or more.[17] An adaptive benefit of meiosis that may explain its long-term maintenance in self-pollinating plants is efficient recombinational repair of DNA damage.[18]

Fungi

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There are basically two distinct types of sexual reproduction among fungi. The first is outcrossing (in heterothallic fungi). In this case, mating occurs between two different haploid individuals to form a diploid zygote, that can then undergo meiosis. The second type is self-fertilization or selfing (in homothallic fungi). In this case, two haploid nuclei derived from the same individual fuse to form a zygote than can then undergo meiosis. Examples of homothallic fungi that undergo selfing include species with an aspergillus-like asexual stage (anamorphs) occurring in many different genera,[19] several species of the ascomycete genus Cochliobolus,[20] and the ascomycete Pneumocystis jirovecii[21] (for other examples, see Homothallism). A review of evidence on the evolution of sexual reproduction in the fungi led to the concept that the original mode of sexual reproduction in the last eukaryotic common ancestor was homothallic or self-fertile unisexual reproduction.[22]

Advantages

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There are several advantages for the self-fertilization observed in flowering plants and protists. In flowering plants, it is important for some plants not to be dependent on pollinating agents that other plants rely on for fertilization. This is unusual, however, considering that many plant species have evolved to become incompatible with their own gametes. While these species would not be well served by having autogamous self-fertilization as a reproductive mechanism, other species, which do not have self-incompatibility, would benefit from autogamy. Protists have the advantage of diversifying their modes of reproduction. This is useful for a multitude of reasons. First, if there is an unfavorable change in the environment that puts the ability to deliver offspring at risk, then it is advantageous for an organism to have autogamy at its disposal. In other organisms, it is seen that genetic diversity arising from sexual reproduction is maintained by changes in the environment that favor certain genotypes over others. Aside from extreme circumstances, it is possible that this form of reproduction gives rise to a genotype in the offspring that will increase fitness in the environment. This is due to the nature of the genetic degeneration and remodeling intrinsic to autogamy in unicellular organisms. Thus, autogamous behavior may become advantageous to have if an individual wanted to ensure offspring viability and survival. This advantage also applies to flowering plants. However, it is important to note that this change has not shown to produce a progeny with more fitness in unicellular organisms.[23] It is possible that the nutrition deprived state of the parent cells before autogamy created a barrier for producing offspring that could thrive in those same stressful environments.[24]

Disadvantages

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In flowering plants, autogamy has the disadvantage of producing low genetic diversity in the species that use it as the predominant mode of reproduction. This leaves those species particularly susceptible to pathogens and viruses that can harm it. In addition, the foraminiferans that use autogamy have shown to produce substantially smaller progeny as a result.[25] This indicates that since it is generally an emergency survival mechanism for unicellular species, the mechanism does not have the nutritional resources that would be provided by the organism if it were undergoing binary fission.[26]

Genetic consequences

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Self-fertilization results in the loss of genetic variation within an individual (offspring), because many of the genetic loci that were heterozygous become homozygous. This can result in the expression of harmful recessive alleles, which can have serious consequences for the individual. The effects are most extreme when self-fertilization occurs in organisms that are usually out-crossing.[27] In plants, selfing can occur as autogamous or geitonogamous pollinations and can have varying fitness affects that show up as autogamy depression. After several generations, inbreeding depression is likely to purge the deleterious alleles from the population because the individuals carrying them have mostly died or failed to reproduce.[28]

If no other effects interfere, the proportion of heterozygous loci is halved in each successive generation, as shown in the following table.[29]

  • Parental : x (100%), and in
  • 1 generation gives:  : : , which means that the frequency of heterozygotes now is 50% of the starting value.
  • By the 10 generation, heterozygotes have almost completely disappeared, and the population is polarized, with almost exclusively homozygous individuals ( and )
Illustration model of the decrease in genetic variation in a population of self-fertilized organisms derived from a heterozygous individual, assuming equal fitness
Generation AA (%) Aa (%) aa (%)
P 100
F1 25 50 25
F2 37.5 25 37.5
F3 43.75 12.5 43.75
F4 46.875 6.25 46.875
F5 48.4375 3.125 48.4375
F6 49.21875 1.5625 49.21875
F7 49.609375 0.78125 49.609375
F8 49.8046875 0.390625 49.8046875
F9 49.90234375 0.1953125 49.90234375
F10 49.995117187 ≈ 50.0 0.09765626 ≈ 0.0 49.995117187 ≈ 50.0

Evolution

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The evolutionary shift from outcrossing to self-fertilization is one of the most frequent evolutionary transitions in plants. Since autogamy in flowering plants and autogamy in unicellular species is fundamentally different, and plants and protists are not related, it is likely that both instances evolved separately. However, due to the little overall genetic variation that arises in progeny, it is not fully understood how autogamy has been maintained in the tree of life.[30]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Autogamy is a form of sexual reproduction characterized by the fusion of two gametes derived from the same individual, resulting in self-fertilization and the formation of a zygote.[1] This process occurs in hermaphroditic organisms and contrasts with allogamy, where gametes from different individuals unite.[2] In flowering plants, autogamy specifically refers to self-pollination within the same flower, where pollen from the anther fertilizes the ovule without external agents.[3] This mechanism ensures reproductive assurance in environments with scarce pollinators or mates, promoting seed set even under suboptimal conditions.[4] However, it often leads to reduced genetic diversity and potential inbreeding depression, which can lower offspring fitness due to the expression of deleterious recessive alleles.[4] Beyond plants, autogamy is prominent in certain protists, such as the ciliate Paramecium, where it involves nuclear reorganization and the fusion of haploid nuclei within a single cell to restore diploidy and rejuvenate the organism.[5] Evolutionarily, repeated transitions between autogamy and outcrossing (allogamy) have driven speciation in groups like the orchid genus Epipactis, where autogamous species exhibit broader geographic ranges but limited gene flow.[4] Overall, autogamy balances immediate reproductive success against long-term genetic risks, influencing population dynamics and adaptation across taxa.

Definition and Fundamentals

Definition

Autogamy is a form of sexual reproduction characterized by the fusion of two gametes or haploid nuclei derived from the same individual, leading to self-fertilization.[6][7] This process results in the formation of a zygote from a single parent and typically increases homozygosity in the offspring due to the absence of genetic input from a separate mate.[8] The term "autogamy" derives from the Greek roots autos (self) and gamos (marriage), reflecting its nature as a self-contained reproductive mechanism.[9] In unicellular organisms, such as certain protists, autogamy often involves the division of a single cell to produce the fusing gametes or nuclei, enabling reproduction without requiring a partner.[9] In multicellular organisms, including flowering plants, it manifests as the production and union of gametes within the same individual, such as through within-flower pollination.[10] The basic process entails gamete formation followed by their fusion internally, bypassing external mating and producing a zygote that carries the genetic material of one parent.[6] This contrasts briefly with allogamy, where gametes originate from distinct individuals to promote genetic diversity.[8] Autogamy, the fusion of male and female gametes produced by the same individual within a single reproductive structure such as a flower or gonad, contrasts fundamentally with allogamy, which involves the transfer of gametes between genetically distinct individuals to promote outcrossing and heterozygosity.[11] In allogamy, also termed xenogamy when occurring between different plants, pollen or sperm from one individual fertilizes the ovules or eggs of another, enhancing genetic diversity through recombination of alleles from separate genomes.[12] This outcrossing mechanism relies on external vectors like pollinators or water currents, differing from autogamy's reliance on internal self-compatibility without such intermediaries.[13] Geitonogamy represents a related but mechanically distinct form of self-fertilization, where pollen is transferred between flowers or reproductive units on the same plant, though the genetic outcome mirrors autogamy by producing homozygous offspring from a single genotype.[11] Unlike autogamy's within-flower process, geitonogamy often involves pollinator-mediated movement, potentially incurring energy costs for floral displays while still limiting gene flow compared to true allogamy.[4] This distinction highlights autogamy's efficiency in isolated or resource-poor environments, as it avoids the need for inter-floral transfer.[13] Apomixis and parthenogenesis serve as asexual alternatives to autogamy, bypassing gamete fusion entirely to produce seeds or offspring that are clonal copies of the parent.[14] In apomixis, an unreduced embryo sac develops into a seed without fertilization, often incorporating parthenogenetic activation of the egg cell, which contrasts with autogamy's requirement for syngamy between complementary gametes.[15] Parthenogenesis specifically entails embryo formation from an unfertilized ovule or egg, lacking the meiotic reduction and genetic mixing inherent in autogamous sexual reproduction.[16]
Reproductive ModeGamete SourceGenetic OutcomeMechanism
AutogamySame flower/gonad on one individualHomozygous offspring; reduced heterozygositySelf-fertilization within single structure; no external vector needed[11]
GeitonogamyDifferent flowers on same individualHomozygous offspring; equivalent to autogamy geneticallyPollinator-mediated transfer between flowers; mechanically cross-like[12]
AllogamyDifferent individuals/plantsHeterozygous offspring; increased diversityOutcrossing via vectors; promotes gene flow[13]
Evolutionary trade-offs among these modes balance reproductive assurance against diversity loss: autogamy and geitonogamy ensure offspring production in sparse populations but risk inbreeding, while allogamy fosters adaptation through variability at the cost of potential mate scarcity; apomixis maximizes clonal fidelity yet limits evolutionary flexibility.[14]

Occurrence Across Taxa

In Protists

Autogamy is prevalent among unicellular protists, particularly in ciliates and foraminiferans, where it serves as an adaptive response to isolation or environmental stressors such as nutrient deprivation. In these organisms, the process allows self-fertilization without requiring a mating partner, enabling reproduction in sparse populations or under adverse conditions.[17][18] In the ciliate Paramecium aurelia, autogamy often occurs as an alternative to conjugation when compatible mates are unavailable, typically triggered by starvation. The process begins with meiotic division of the micronucleus, producing gametic pronuclei that fuse within the same cell to form a zygotic nucleus, followed by development of a new macronucleus. This nuclear reorganization addresses clonal aging, where successive asexual divisions lead to accumulation of deleterious mutations in the micronucleus, resulting in increased mortality and defective progeny; autogamy rejuvenates the lineage by generating a homozygous genome and a fresh macronucleus, effectively resetting genetic deterioration.[19][17][20] Similarly, in the ciliate Tetrahymena rostrata, autogamous events are rare and facultative, induced by starvation that prompts encystment, meiosis, and subsequent pronuclear fusion to restore the macronucleus. These episodes involve extensive genome reorganization, including development of new macronuclei from the zygotic nucleus, which counters senescence characterized by declining cell division rates over clonal generations. Such rejuvenation maintains viability in isolated or stressed populations of this histophagous species.[21] In foraminiferans, autogamy is exemplified by Allogromia laticollaris, where it manifests as rare sexual reproduction within a single theca, or test. Amoeboid gametes produced from the parent's haploid nuclei fuse internally to form diploid zygotes, often leading to cyst formation and subsequent genome amplification through endoreplication. This mechanism supports reproduction under restricted dietary conditions, highlighting autogamy's role in isolated benthic environments.[22][18] Overall, autogamy in protists is typically facultative, activated by the absence of mates or environmental cues like starvation, allowing these microbes to persist and occasionally reorganize their genomes without external genetic input.[17][21]

In Flowering Plants

In flowering plants, or angiosperms, autogamy refers to the transfer of pollen from the anther to the stigma within the same flower, ensuring self-fertilization without reliance on external pollinators. This process contrasts with geitonogamy, where pollen moves between flowers on the same plant, potentially involving pollinator-mediated transfer. Several structural and temporal adaptations facilitate autogamy in angiosperms. Cleistogamy involves the production of closed flowers that never open, allowing pollen to directly contact the stigma inside the bud, as seen in species like Viola riviniana.[23] Delayed selfing, another key mechanism, occurs when anthers release pollen after the stigma's peak receptivity to outcross pollen has passed, prioritizing cross-pollination initially but ensuring self-fertilization if needed; this "best-of-both-worlds" strategy balances reproductive assurance with outcrossing opportunities.[23] Autogamy is prevalent in approximately 20% of angiosperm species, many of which have evolved from outcrossing ancestors through reductions in floral size and pollinator attraction traits.[24] Representative autogamous species include garden pea (Pisum sativum), a major grain legume with highly efficient within-flower self-pollination adapted to temperate climates, and thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana), a model organism exhibiting near-complete autogamy due to loss of self-incompatibility.[25][26] Ecologically, autogamy is favored in stable habitats with low population densities, where pollinator visitation is unreliable, providing reproductive assurance amid sparse mating opportunities.[27] In such contexts, autogamous populations often experience lower pollinator densities compared to outcrossing ones, enhancing seed set under pollination limitation.[28] Autogamy has played a pivotal role in crop domestication; for instance, bread wheat (Triticum aestivum) and rice (Oryza sativa) exhibit partial to strong autogamy, facilitating uniform seed production and human selection for yield traits over millennia.[29][30] Recent studies highlight shifts in autogamy rates between wild and cultivated plants, influenced by climate change. Cultivated autogamous crops, such as tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), show stabilized high selfing (near 100%) compared to wild relatives with variable rates (50-80%), though climate-induced pollinator declines may further elevate autogamy in semi-wild agroecosystems.[31] Threatened wild angiosperms face heightened pollen limitation, with autogamy serving as an adaptive buffer in ~30% of cases under altered climates.[32]

In Fungi

In fungi, autogamy manifests primarily through homothallic strains, where a single mycelium produces both mating types or self-fertile spores, allowing sexual reproduction in isolation without requiring a genetically distinct partner.[33] This contrasts with heterothallism, where compatible mates of opposite types are needed, and enables rapid diploid formation via syngamy between genetically identical nuclei.[34] In ascomycetes, such as the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, autogamy occurs via self-diploidization, where haploid cells of opposite mating types (a and α), derived from the same clonal lineage, fuse following mating-type switching mediated by the HO endonuclease gene.[35] This switching mechanism generates both mating types within a single culture, facilitating pheromone signaling and cell fusion for sporulation.[36] In basidiomycetes, autogamy is rarer due to predominantly outcrossing systems, but selfing can arise through pseudobipolar mating, where linkage or recombination between the pheromone-receptor (P/R) and homeodomain (HD) loci reduces the number of incompatibility barriers, increasing the probability of intra-individual compatibility.[37] A notable example of partial autogamy is found in the pseudohomothallic ascomycete Neurospora tetrasperma, where ascospores typically contain paired nuclei of opposite mating types (mat a and mat A), forming self-fertile heterokaryons upon germination.[38] This system evolved from heterothallic ancestors like Neurospora crassa through mating-type locus modifications, allowing occasional outcrossing while promoting selfing.[39] In laboratory settings, such partial autogamy simplifies strain maintenance and genetic manipulation by obviating the need for controlled matings, whereas in natural populations, it balances reproductive assurance in sparse environments against reduced genetic diversity from inbreeding. Recent genomic studies (post-2020) on the pathogenic ascomycete Candida albicans have elucidated how autogamy-like processes, enabled by loss of heterozygosity at the mating-type-like (MTL) locus, drive adaptation, including the evolution of antifungal resistance. In C. albicans, homozygous MTL configurations (a/a or α/α) permit rare self-compatible mating or parasexual cycles, promoting gross chromosomal changes that unmask recessive mutations and enhance drug tolerance, as observed in clinical isolates.[40] These findings underscore autogamy's role in rapid genomic plasticity for pathogenic fungi facing selective pressures like antibiotics.

Advantages and Disadvantages

Advantages

Autogamy provides reproductive assurance by enabling organisms to produce offspring without the need for a compatible mate, particularly in environments where potential partners are scarce or absent. This benefit is especially pronounced in isolated populations, such as those on remote islands or in newly colonized habitats, where finding a mate would otherwise limit reproduction. In flowering plants, autogamy ensures seed set in pollinator-poor settings, allowing persistence where outcrossing species might fail.[41][42] Similarly, in protists like certain ciliates, autogamy facilitates self-fertilization when conjugation partners are unavailable, guaranteeing the continuation of the lineage under isolation.[43] A key physiological advantage of autogamy lies in its resource efficiency, as organisms allocate fewer energy and materials to mate attraction and search. In autogamous flowering plants, this manifests as reduced investment in elaborate floral structures, such as smaller flowers, lower pollen production, and the absence of nectar rewards, freeing up resources for direct seed and fruit development. This streamlined reproductive strategy enhances overall fitness in resource-limited conditions by minimizing wasteful expenditure on traits geared toward pollinator visitation.[44] Autogamy supports rapid population establishment, enabling quicker colonization of new or disturbed habitats compared to obligate outcrossers. Autogamous species can found viable populations from single individuals or small propagule numbers, bypassing the delays associated with mate location. For instance, autogamous weeds like Arabidopsis thaliana exemplify this by swiftly invading agricultural fields and waste areas, leveraging self-fertilization to achieve high reproductive output and spread efficiently across landscapes.[45] Temporal reliability is another ecological benefit, as autogamy circumvents unpredictable external factors that could disrupt reproduction. In plants, it avoids dependence on erratic pollinator availability, such as during adverse weather or seasonal fluctuations, ensuring consistent seed production. In protists, particularly ciliates, autogamy bypasses the need for synchronous conjugation partners, which may be absent due to population density or environmental stressors, thus maintaining reproductive cycles in variable conditions.[46][43]

Disadvantages

Autogamous reproduction produces genetically uniform offspring, which reduces a population's adaptability to fluctuating environmental conditions, such as shifts in climate or resource availability, by limiting the range of phenotypes available to respond to selection pressures.[47] This uniformity can hinder the ability of autogamous organisms to colonize or persist in dynamic ecosystems where diverse traits are advantageous for survival. In protists and fungi, where autogamy often occurs under stress, this lack of variability may further constrain recovery or expansion once conditions stabilize. In flowering plants, autogamy frequently evolves alongside a reduction in floral displays and nectar production, decreasing attractiveness to pollinators and thereby excluding opportunities for outcrossing even when pollinator abundance improves.[48] This selfing syndrome can lock populations into reliance on autonomous reproduction, increasing vulnerability to sudden changes in pollinator dynamics and potentially leading to reproductive isolation in mixed mating environments. While reproductive assurance offers benefits in pollinator-scarce settings, such exclusion risks underscore the ecological trade-offs of autogamy. Autogamous species often exhibit slower spread and lower establishment success in competitive, heterogeneous habitats compared to outcrossers, as their uniform progeny struggle to compete across varied microhabitats or exploit new resources effectively.[47] Limited gene flow between populations exacerbates this, impeding colonization of diverse ecosystems and reducing overall range expansion. In fungi, homothallic (self-fertile) species may face similar constraints in variable soil or host environments, where outcrossing could facilitate broader dispersal. The transition to autogamy can involve physiological costs, particularly through the breakdown of self-incompatibility mechanisms, which may result in inefficient reproduction attempts where pollen is partially rejected, wasting energy and resources on aborted fertilization events.[49] This inefficiency arises from incomplete loss of recognition systems, diverting metabolic investments from seed production to futile interactions and potentially lowering overall reproductive output in borderline self-compatible lineages.

Genetic and Evolutionary Implications

Genetic Consequences

Autogamy results in a rapid increase in homozygosity within populations, as self-fertilization halves the heterozygosity at each locus per generation, leading to the fixation of alleles and a doubling of homozygote frequency relative to outcrossed progeny in the immediate generation.[50] This process can be quantified using the inbreeding coefficient FF, where the expected homozygosity HH after selfing is given by $ H = 1 - 2pq(1 - F) $, with F=0.5F = 0.5 for the first generation of selfing from non-inbred parents.[51] In repeated autogamy, FF approaches 1 asymptotically as Ft=1(1/2)tF_t = 1 - (1/2)^t, where tt is the number of selfing generations, resulting in near-complete homozygosity after several generations.[52] This elevated homozygosity exposes recessive deleterious alleles to selection, often manifesting as inbreeding depression, where selfed offspring exhibit reduced fitness due to the expression of harmful recessives.[53] In many flowering plants capable of selfing, this leads to 20-50% reductions in viability and reproductive success for selfed progeny compared to outcrossed ones, particularly in early generations before purging occurs.[54] For instance, studies on partially selfing species show multiplicative fitness losses across life-history traits, with seed set and survival most affected.[55] Over multiple generations, however, autogamy can facilitate the purging of deleterious mutations by increasing their homozygosity and allowing natural selection to remove low-fitness individuals, thereby reducing the genetic load in stable environments.[56] This purging is more efficient for strongly recessive lethals in selfing lineages, as evidenced by lower mutation loads in highly autogamous plant taxa compared to outcrossers.[57] Recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in Arabidopsis thaliana, a predominantly autogamous model species, have provided insights into how selfing contributes to the loss of hybrid vigor by eroding heterozygosity at key fitness loci.[58] For example, 2020s analyses reveal that selfing accelerates the fixation of deleterious variants at quantitative trait loci (QTLs) associated with growth and reproduction, diminishing the overdominance effects that underpin heterosis in outcrossed hybrids.[59] These genomic patterns underscore autogamy's role in constraining adaptive potential through reduced allelic diversity.[60]

Evolutionary Dynamics

Transitions from outcrossing (allogamy) to self-fertilization (autogamy) in hermaphroditic organisms are among the most frequent evolutionary shifts, often driven by mate or pollen scarcity in sparse populations.[53] This transition is facilitated by the loss of self-incompatibility (SI) mechanisms, such as mutations or deletions in S-RNase genes in plants, which enforce outcrossing by rejecting self-pollen.[61] In flowering plants, these genetic changes at the S-locus lead to self-compatibility, enabling autogamy and often accompanied by floral modifications that promote self-pollination.[44] Autogamy accelerates speciation by promoting reproductive isolation, as selfing lineages diverge rapidly from outcrossing ancestors without gene flow. In the orchid genus Epipactis, iterative shifts from allogamy to autogamy have driven the radiation of over 10 species, with autogamous taxa showing incipient speciation through morphological and ecological divergence.[4] Similarly, in invasive plant species like Capsella bursa-pastoris, predominant autogamy has enhanced its colonization success in novel habitats, allowing rapid establishment despite low pollinator availability.[62] In fungal pathogens, transitions to selfing facilitate host adaptation by maintaining beneficial alleles in isolated populations, as seen in ascomycetes where homothallism (self-fertile autogamy) evolves recurrently.[63] Reversions from autogamy to allogamy are rare, supporting the "evolutionary dead-end" hypothesis, primarily due to accumulated genetic load from inbreeding depression and reduced additive genetic variance, which limits adaptive potential.[64] However, facultative selfing—mixed mating with variable selfing rates—remains common and evolutionarily stable, allowing flexibility in response to environmental cues.[53] Evolutionary models adapting Bateman's principle to plants predict higher selfing rates under pollen limitation, as females gain reproductive assurance without the diminishing returns of multiple matings, contrasting with male-biased variance in outcrossing systems.[65] These dynamics underscore autogamy's role in short-term persistence but long-term constraints on diversification.

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