Sex-specific facilitation and reproduction of the gynodioecious cushion plant Arenaria polytrichoides on the Himalaya-Hengduan mountains, SW China.

IF 4.6 1区 生物学 Q1 PLANT SCIENCES
Plant Diversity Pub Date : 2023-07-14 eCollection Date: 2024-03-01 DOI:10.1016/j.pld.2023.07.002
Xufang Chen, Yazhou Zhang, Lishen Qian, Renyu Zhou, Hang Sun, Jianguo Chen
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Abstract

When benefiting other beneficiaries, cushion plants may reciprocally receive feedback effects. The feedback effects on different sex morphs, however, remains unclear. In this study, taking the gynodioecious Arenaria polytrichiodes as a model species, we aimed to assess the sex-specific facilitation intensity of cushion plant by measuring the beneficiary cover ratio, and to assess the potential costs in cushion reproductive functions by measuring the flower and fruit cover ratios. The total beneficiary cover ratio was similar between females and hermaphrodites. Females produced much less flowers but more fruits than hermaphrodites. These results suggested that females and hermaphrodites possess similar facilitation intensity, and female cushion A. polytrichoides may allocate more resources saved from pollen production to seed production, while hermaphrodites possibly allocate more resources to pollen production hence reducing seed production. The surface areas covered by beneficiaries produced less flowers and fruits than areas without beneficiaries. In addition, strong negative correlations between beneficiary cover and flower cover were detected for both females and hermaphrodites, but the correlation strength were similar for these two sex morphs. However, the correlation between beneficiary cover and fruit cover was only significantly negative for females, suggesting that beneficiary plants negatively affect fruit reproduction of females while have neutral effects on hermaphrodites. All the results suggest that to facilitate other beneficiaries can induce reproductive costs on cushion A. polytrichoides, with females possibly suffering greater cost than hermaphrodites. Such differentiation in reproductive costs between sex morphs, in long-term perspective, may imply sex imbalance in population dynamics.

中国西南部喜马拉雅-横断山脉上雌雄异株垫生植物Arenaria polytrichoides的性别特异性促进和繁殖。
在使其他受益者受益时,垫状植物可能会收到互惠的反馈效应。然而,对不同性别形态的反馈效应仍不清楚。在本研究中,我们以雌雄异体的Arenaria polytrichiodes为模式物种,通过测量受益者覆盖率来评估垫状植物对不同性别的促进强度,并通过测量花和果的覆盖率来评估垫状植物繁殖功能的潜在成本。雌性和雌雄同体的总受惠覆盖率相似。与雌雄同体相比,雌花的产量要少得多,但果实的产量要高得多。这些结果表明,雌虫和雌雄虫具有相似的促进强度,雌虫可能会将更多从花粉生产中节省下来的资源分配给种子生产,而雌雄虫可能会将更多资源分配给花粉生产,从而减少种子生产。与没有受益人的地区相比,受益人覆盖的地表区域生产的花和果实较少。此外,雌花和雌雄花的受益者覆盖率与花的覆盖率之间存在很强的负相关,但这两种性别形态的相关强度相似。然而,只有雌性植株的受惠植株覆盖率与果实覆盖率之间存在显著负相关,这表明受惠植株对雌性植株的果实繁殖有负面影响,而对雌雄同体植株的影响则是中性的。所有这些结果都表明,为其他受益者提供便利会导致垫甲藻的繁殖成本增加,雌性可能比雌雄同体付出更大的代价。从长远角度看,这种性别形态间生殖成本的差异可能意味着种群动态中的性别失衡。
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来源期刊
Plant Diversity
Plant Diversity Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
1863
审稿时长
35 days
期刊介绍: Plant Diversity (formerly Plant Diversity and Resources) is an international plant science journal that publishes substantial original research and review papers that advance our understanding of the past and current distribution of plants, contribute to the development of more phylogenetically accurate taxonomic classifications, present new findings on or insights into evolutionary processes and mechanisms that are of interest to the community of plant systematic and evolutionary biologists. While the focus of the journal is on biodiversity, ecology and evolution of East Asian flora, it is not limited to these topics. Applied evolutionary issues, such as climate change and conservation biology, are welcome, especially if they address conceptual problems. Theoretical papers are equally welcome. Preference is given to concise, clearly written papers focusing on precisely framed questions or hypotheses. Papers that are purely descriptive have a low chance of acceptance. Fields covered by the journal include: plant systematics and taxonomy- evolutionary developmental biology- reproductive biology- phylo- and biogeography- evolutionary ecology- population biology- conservation biology- palaeobotany- molecular evolution- comparative and evolutionary genomics- physiology- biochemistry
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