Abstract

We analyzed sex ratio, growth rates, and spacing among individuals of Podocarpus nagi, a dioecious tree, on Mt. Mikasa, Nara City, Japan. The sex ratio of reproductive trees ≥ 5 cm in stem diameter at breast height (dbh, 130 cm above ground level) was significantly male-biased. The sex ratio was male-biased in the < 20 cm and ≥ 50 cm size classes, while it did not depart from 1:1 in the 20 ≤ dbh < 50 cm class. Growth rate varied with tree size in males but not in females. The precocity and vigor of males suggests that differences in reproductive costs between sexes induce the biased sex ratio. Random labeling tests on the positions of reproductive trees showed that in the < 30 cm class, males and females were distributed randomly and independently from each other. In the ≥ 30 cm class, males were significantly clumped, whereas females were randomly distributed. Males and females showed significant repulsion, i.e., a spatial segregation of sexes. Both intra- and intersexual effects on the growth rate of crowding by neighbors were significant for females, but not for males. Maximum competitive interference was observed at a distance of 5 m, which corresponded approximately to the radius of clumps of large males and to the significant repulsive distance between large males and females. These results suggest that sexual differences in sensitivity to local crowding are related to the formation of gender-dependent spatial patterns. Formation of female-repulsive male clumps and a male-biased sex ratio may intensify the decreased probability of regeneration near males, as suggested by the limited seed-dispersal range of this species, thereby promoting coexistence with other species.

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