The maintenance of outcrossing in cleistogamous plants that produce both open, facultatively outcrossing chasmogamous (CH) and closed, obligate selfing cleistogamous (CL) flowers is puzzling because CL reproduction is thought to be more reliable and less costly. A possible explanation for the maintenance of CH flowers is the avoidance of inbreeding depression. However, inbreeding depression for cleistogamous species has rarely been quantified. In this study, we estimate levels of inbreeding depression in plants from three populations of Triodanis perfoliata (L.) Nieuwl., a dimorphic cleistogamous annual, in greenhouse conditions. Estimates of inbreeding depression at multiple life stages in all three populations were low and often not diffe...