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The evolution and maintenance of plant sexual diversity

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Dioecious = large clones. Monecious (hermaphrodites) = smaller plants ... In half of families but only 6% of species are dioecious ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The evolution and maintenance of plant sexual diversity


1
  • The evolution and maintenance of plant sexual
    diversity

2
Why study polymorphic sexual systems?
Why is there high sexual diversity in flowering
plants?
  • Immobility (rely on pollen vectors)
  • Hermaphoditism (self-fertilization)
  • Modular growth - get bigger by producing
    repeating organs via apical meristems
  • (clonality and inter flower selfing)
  • Closed carpel (mate selection e.g. SI)
  • Life history diversity (mating patterns depend on
    longevity, plant size etc.)

3
Outline
  • Definitions and examples
  • The evolution and function of stylar
    polymorphisms
  • heterostyly
  • enantiostyly
  • flexistyly
  • Major transitions
  • The evolution of separate sexes from
    hermaphroditism (cosexuality)
  • The evolution of self-fertilization from
    outcrossing (Mating system evolution)-next class

4
sexual systems
  • Sexual system the particular deployment of
    sexual structures within and among plants and the
    physiological mechanisms governing mating
  • Sexual interference conflict in maternal and
    paternal functions resulting in gamete wastage
    and reduced fitness.
  • (may or may not be associated with
    self-pollination)

5
Examples of plant sexual systems
  • Dichogamy differences in the timing of pollen
    dispersal from anthers and stigma receptivity of
    flowers.
  • protandry male phase comes before the female
    phase
  • protogyny female phase comes before the male
    phase

Herkogamy the spatial separation of the anthers
and stigmas within a flower.
6
mating systems
Mating system the mode of transmission of genes
from one generation to the next through sexual
reproduction (e.g. maternal selfing rate)
Selfing rate (s) the proportion of seeds that
are self fertilized Outcrossing rate (t1-s)
the proportion of seeds that are
outcrossed Inbreeding depression the reduction
in viability and fertility of inbred offspring
compared with outbred offspring.
7
polymorphic sexual systems
  • The co-occurrence within a population of
    morphologically distinct mating groups
    distinguished by differences in their sexual
    organs

8
Why study polymorphic sexual systems?
Why study plant polymorphic sexual systems?
  • simple inheritance
  • sexual morphs easily identified in the field
  • under strong frequency-dependent selection
  • theoretical models provide predictions
  • manipulative experiments possible

Sagittaria latifolia
Cyanella alba
Long-styled
Short-styled
  • Primula polyneura

9
Floral design and pollen transfer heterostyly
Heterostyly two (distyly) or three (tristyly)
style morphs differ in the reciprocal placement
of anthers and stigmas.
  • reciprocal sex-organ placement
  • heteromorphic
  • self-incompatibility
  • (disassortative mating)
  • genetic polymorphism

10
Floral design and pollen transfer
11
Pollen transfer and equilibrium morph ratios in
typical tristyly
12
Pollen transfer and equilibrium morph ratios in
typical tristyly
13
Pollen transfer and equilibrium morph ratios in
typical tristyly
14
Pollen transfer and equilibrium morph ratios in
typical tristyly
15
Equilibrium morph frequencies
  • Disassortative mating results in negative
    frequency-dependent selection
  • Equal morph ratios are predicted
  • 111 found in many tristylous populations

R.A. Fisher
Lythrum salicaria
16
Why study polymorphic sexual systems?
The maintenance of sexual polymorphisms
  • disassortative mating among morphs
  • negative frequency dependent selection
  • selection for equal morph ratios

17
Floral design and pollen transfer enantiostyly
Enantiostyly mirror image flowers in which the
style bends either to the left or the right side
of the floral axis-deposits pollen on the left or
right side of the bee.
18
Floral design and pollen transfer
  • Created straight styled, monomorphic and
    dimorphic arrays from Solanum rostratum
    (monomorphic)
  • Highest outcrossing rate in dimorphic arrays
  • Most of the mating was intermorph in the
    dimorphic array
  • (negative frequency dependent selection)

Jesson and Barrett 2002 Nature
Inter-morph mating
19
Floral design and pollen transfer
  • Herkogamy reduces self pollination (and other
    forms of sexual interference)
  • Separation reduces precision of cross pollination
    (lower male and female fitness-pollen wastage and
    pollen limitation)
  • Reciprocal herkogamy improves pollen transfer
    efficiency
  • Polymorphisms is generally maintained by
    disassortative mating at equal frequency

20
Flexistyly
  • Flexistyly populations contain two floral morphs
    that differ in there temporal patterns of style
    growth and orientation

Alpinia
  • combines herkogamy and dichogamy
  • found in tropical gingers

protandrous protogynous
21
The evolution of separate sexes
  • Gender is the relative contributions that plants
    make to the next generation as a male and female
    parent (quantitative measure)
  • Monomorphism - continuous variation in gender
  • Dimorphism - two distinct sexual morphs that
    function primarily as a male or female parent

Dioecy Gynodioecy Androdioecy
Sagittaria latifolia
Mercurialis annua
Silene vulgaris
22
Evolutionary pathways to gender dimorphism
  • Gynodioecy pathway
  • Monoecy pathway
  • Distyly pathway
  • Heterodichogamy pathway

23
Selective mechanisms and the evolution of
separate sexes
The evolution of dioecy from gynodioecy Nuclear
inheritance of male sterility (female)
  • Females spread if they produce at least two
    times as many seeds as hermaphrodites
  • s ? gt 0.5 (half the seeds of hermaphrodites die
    due to inbreeding depression)
  • -resource reallocation from male function to
    female function (females produce twice as many
    ovules)

w for invasion Pollen 1
0 Seed 1 gt2
24
Cyto-nuclear control of gender dimorphism
Sterility mutations can occur in the maternally
inherited mitochondrial genome All offspring of
the male sterile mutant with be female Females
can spread with only a slight female fertility
advantage
Dioecy can then evolve from gynodioecy as
hermaphrodites invest in male function
25
Selective mechanisms and the evolution of
separate sexes
  • Lycium - self incompatibility lost with
    chromosome doubling
  • Polyploids are gender dimorphic
  • Association between polyploidy and dimorphism
    also found in 12 unrelated genera in other
    families

. Miller and Venable 2000
26
Selective mechanisms and the evolution of
separate sexes
  • Large plant size (e.g. clonal)-gthigher selfing
    rates
  • Geitonogamy (transfer of self pollen between
    flowers)

Sagittaria latifolia Dioecious large
clones Monecious (hermaphrodites) smaller
plants s ? gt 0.5 in some monecious populations
Dorken et al 2002
27
The comparative biology of dioecy
  • In half of families but only 6 of species are
    dioecious
  • Why is dioecy associated with low
    diversification?
  • extinction rates
  • extinction risk is high in small populations
    (need males and females)
  • sexual dimorphism (risk that females may not be
    visited when pollinators are rare)
  • speciation rates
  • associated with unspecialized pollination systems
    (wind, water, generalist pollinators) which may
    hinder speciation

28
Self incompatibility
Two main types of homomorphic incompatibility

-gametophytic incompatibility phenotype is
determined by its haploid genotype e.g. S1 or S2
can not fertilize S1 S2 plants but S3 pollen
can -sporophythic incompatibility governed by
the genotype of the pollen producing parent e.g.
any pollen from and S1S2 plant can not fertilize
an S1_ or S2_ plant
29
Self incompatibility
Maintained by negative frequency dependant
selection (balancing selection) Rare SI types
have a fitness advantage as they can mate with
all other plants in the population
Brassica
Many S alleles Low Fst compared to neutral
loci (higher effective migration due to balancing
selection)
Glémin et al 2005
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