Patterns of biomass allocation to male and female functions in plants with different mating systems
- 30 April 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 66 (2) , 299-306
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00379868
Abstract
With the use of dry wt biomass the patterns of investment in male and female functions (prezygotic cost) in plants with different mating systems were examined. All the flower parts of both xenogamous and facultatively xenogamous species were heavier, i.e., larger, than those of facultatively autogamous species. Likewise, the dry weights of all the flower parts of xenogamous species exceeded those of facultatively xenogamous species. On a relative basis, xenogamous species invested less in calyces and more in corollas compared to species with the other mating systems. Facultatively autogamous species invested relatively more in pistils. Xenogamous species invested relatively more in stamens than do facultatively autogamous species. The ratios of dry weight stamens to dry weight pistils were equivalent in xenogamous and facultatively xenogamous species. The available data from xenogamous species suggest a pattern of resource allocation that is independent of sexual system (perfect-flowered, monoecious, or dioecious) and pollen vector. The cost of mating (prezygotic cost) was male biased and frequently exceeded by parental investment (postzygotic cost). These results are not consistent with models that predict equal allocation of resources to male and female sexual function but are consistent with those that predict unequal allocation of resources to those functions in outbreeding hermaphroditic angiosperms. Two additional lines of evidence are inconsistent with the expectations of sex allocation theory. First, resource allocation to sexual function was not equal in wind-pollinated species. Second, relative amounts of the resources allocated to male vis-a-vis female function did not decrease between xenogamy and facultative xenogamy i.e., with an increase in selfing rate.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Resource allocation and floral sex ratios in Zizania aquaticaCanadian Journal of Botany, 1984
- Outcrossing and Sex Function in Hermaphrodites: A Resource-Allocation ModelThe American Naturalist, 1983
- Effects of Light and Density on Resource Allocation in a Forest Herb, Aster acuminatus (Compositae)American Journal of Botany, 1980
- The costs of sex in seaweedsBiological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1980
- Parental strategies of angiospermsNew Zealand Journal of Botany, 1979
- The pollination of Ficus vogelii in GhanaBotanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 1979
- Energy Distribution in Reproductive Structures of AmaryllisAmerican Journal of Botany, 1978
- Pollen-Ovule Ratios: A Conservative Indicator of Breeding Systems in Flowering PlantsEvolution, 1977
- Electrophoretic studies of genetic variation in natural populations of allogamous Limnanthes llba and autogamous Limnanthes floccosa (Limnanthaceae)Heredity, 1975
- Outcrossing in Natural Populations. II. Clarkia unguiculataEvolution, 1965