Abstract
In sexually dimorphic plants, resource allocation to reproduction often differs between sex morphs. In gynodioecious species, i.e. coexisting hermaphrodite and female plants within a population, females often produce more fruits than hermaphrodites. Since fruit production is costlier than flower production, hermaphrodites and females may regulate flower and fruit production differently in response to resource availability. To clarify the gender-specific strategies of reproductive allocation, we assessed sexual dimorphism in reproductive traits, size-dependent resource allocation, morphological traits, and photosynthetic capacity in a natural population of a gynodioecious shrub, Daphne jezoensis Hermaphrodites had larger flowers and increased flower number with plant size at a rate greater than females, but showed consistently smaller fruit production. Although females did not increase flower production as much as hermaphrodites did as their size increased, they produced 3.7 times more fruits than did hermaphrodites. Despite a large sexual difference in fruiting ability based on hand-pollination, total resource investment in reproduction (the sum of flower and fruit mass) was similar between sex morphs across plant sizes, and there was little sexual difference in the cost of reproduction, i.e. the negative effect of current reproduction on future reproductive effort, in the natural population. In addition, there were no sexual differences in the resource allocation to vegetative organs (leaf and root mass) and photosynthetic capacity (light response photosynthetic rates). Under natural conditions, pollen limitation strongly restricted the fruit production of females, resulting in similar cost of reproduction between hermaphrodites and females.
Highlights
Gynodioecy is a mating system where both hermaphrodites and male-sterile plants coexist within a population
We address the following questions: (1) How do hermaphrodites and females vary allocation to flowers and fruits as plant size increases? (2) Is there any difference in total resource investment in reproduction and the cost of reproduction between sex morphs, and to what extent is fruit production restricted by pollen limitation under natural conditions? and (3) Is there any sexual dimorphism in vegetative traits, i.e. morphology, resource allocation to vegetative organs, and photosynthetic capacity?
The present study showed that hermaphrodites and females of D. jezoensis showed different size-dependent sex allocation
Summary
Gynodioecy is a mating system where both hermaphrodites and male-sterile plants (females) coexist within a population. Gynodioecy is considered to be an intermediate stage in the evolution of dioecy (males and females only) from hermaphroditism, and understanding this transition is crucial to clarifying the evolutionary pathways that have led to separate sexes in plants (Charlesworth and Charlesworth 1978; Spigler and Ashman 2012; Dufay et al 2014).
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