Female advantage in gynodioecious plants: A meta-analysis focused on seed quality

Varga, Sandra (2021) Female advantage in gynodioecious plants: A meta-analysis focused on seed quality. Plant Biology . ISSN 1435-8603

Full content URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/plb.13295

Documents
Female advantage in gynodioecious plants: A meta-analysis focused on seed quality
Published Open Access manuscript
[img]
[Download]
[img]
Preview
PDF
plb.13295.pdf - Whole Document
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International.

547kB
Item Type:Article
Item Status:Live Archive

Abstract

In gynodioecious systems, female plants must counteract the selective disadvantage of not passing genes via pollen production, as hermaphrodites can. Theory predicts that females must produce more or better-quality seeds than hermaphrodites in order to be maintained within the same population. This female advantage has been widely measured and reported for seed number, but whether female advantage is gained through the production of better seeds remains relatively under-studied.

Here, a meta-analysis approach was used to investigate whether females in gynodioecious species produce seeds of better quality than hermaphrodites (measured as seed mass, seed nutrient content, seed germinability and seedling survival and performance) in addition to achieving a larger seed production. In total, 50 studies were included, reporting traits for 34 gynodioecious species in 17 different families.

Female advantage was significant for seed number and seed germination, but was not detected for seed mass, seed nutrient content or seedling performance.

A female advantage in seed number was corroborated in this meta-analysis, which together with better seed germination, may explain maintenance of female plants within gynodioecious populations.

Keywords:female advantage, gynodioecy, seed germination, seedling performance
Subjects:C Biological Sciences > C180 Ecology
C Biological Sciences > C142 Reproductive Biology
C Biological Sciences > C182 Evolution
C Biological Sciences > C200 Botany
C Biological Sciences > C100 Biology
Divisions:College of Science > School of Life Sciences
Related URLs:
ID Code:45380
Deposited On:30 Jun 2021 08:40

Repository Staff Only: item control page