Abstract

Cimicifuga simplex (Ranunculaceae) has four types of individuals, differing in their sex expression: there are individuals with hermaphroditic, hermaphroditic and male (andromonoecious), only male, or only female flowers. Purely female individuals appear during the early part of the flowering period of the population, and males during the later part. Strong protandry in hermaphroditic flowers causes a shift in functional sex ratio in the population over time. This facilitates the evolution and maintenance of small proportions of unisexual individuals in the population. A hypothesis developed from this case of multiple sex expression predicts dichogamy as a near-universal feature of andro-and gynomonoecious, androdioecious, and gynodioecious species, and also specific temporal distributions for each sex form depending upon the form of dichogamy. Results of tests on large sets of species strongly support the relevance of this hypothesis.

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