Abstract

Androdioecy is a rare reproductive system. Fraxinus platypoda, a woody canopy species in Japan’s mountainous riparian zones, is described as a morphologically androdioecious species. In this study, we tried to detect whether F. platypoda is also functionally androdioecious. We analyzed its sexual expression, seed development, pollen morphology and germination ability, pollination systems, and mast flowering behavior. We found that the hermaphrodite trees are andromonoecious, with inflorescences bearing male and hermaphroditic flowers, whereas male individuals had only male flowers. Pollen morphology was identical in male flowers, in hermaphrodite flowers of an andromonoecious individual, and in male flowers of male individuals. Pollen from both types of individuals was capable of germination both ex vivo (on nutrient medium) and in vivo in pollination experiments. However, compared with pollen from andromonoecious trees, pollen from male trees showed a higher germination rate. The self-pollination rate of bagged hermaphroditic flowers was almost zero. The fruit set rate following cross-pollination with male pollen from a male tree was higher than that following natural pollination, whereas the rate with hermaphroditic pollen was the same. The flowering and fruiting of F. platypoda have fluctuated over 17 years; the flowering of the two types of sexual individuals exhibited clear synchronization during this period. The frequency of male individuals within the populations is 50%. The maintenance of such a proportion of males in populations of the self-incompatible F. platypoda is either indicative of a true androdioecious species with a diallelic self-incompatibility system or a cryptic-dioecious species. This alternative is discussed here.

Highlights

  • Comparisons of the diverse sexual expressions of plants are important for understanding plant evolution

  • In contrast, viable pollen is produced in hermaphroditic flowers [9]

  • The hermaphroditic individuals were all andromonoecious, with both hermaphroditic flowers and male flowers in their inflorescences

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Comparisons of the diverse sexual expressions of plants are important for understanding plant evolution. Various types of sexual expression are found in flowering plants [1]. The most common type, flowers possess both female and male reproductive organs. Dioecious plants comprise separate female and male individuals. Gynodioecy and androdioecy are intermediate evolutionary states between bisexual and monosexual conditions [2,3], with androdioecy being one of the rarest sexual expressions [4–8]. Morphological androdioecy includes both functional dioecy and functional androdioecy. In functionally dioecious plants exhibiting morphological androdioecy, the anthers of hermaphroditic flowers are indehiscent or the pollen grains are inviable, and the flowers are female. In contrast, viable pollen is produced in hermaphroditic flowers [9]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call