Gynodioecy or leaky dioecy? The unusual sexual system of a coral dune-habitant Tournefortia argentea (Boraginaceae)
The high occurrence of dioecy on oceanic islands has attracted much attention from plant evolutionary biologists. Tournefortia argentea (Boraginaceae), an Indo-Pacific strand plant, has an unusual sexual system which remains poorly understood. Here, we investigated the sexual system of T. argentea b...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant systematics and evolution 2020-08, Vol.306 (4), Article 70 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The high occurrence of dioecy on oceanic islands has attracted much attention from plant evolutionary biologists.
Tournefortia argentea
(Boraginaceae), an Indo-Pacific strand plant, has an unusual sexual system which remains poorly understood. Here, we investigated the sexual system of
T. argentea
based on morphological and micromorphological studies, as well as manipulated pollination treatments. Two morphs of plants were found in the natural populations on Xisha Islands: hermaphrodite and female plants. Each sexual morph exhibited different floral traits, showing a modest form of sexual dimorphism. Flowers of hermaphrodites display significantly larger size in corolla and anther than those of females. Fruit sets under natural condition and hand pollination in hermaphroditic individuals were both far lower than that of female ones, which shows characteristics of both leaky dioecy and gynodioecy. We investigated how these differences in floral traits between females and hermaphrodites affect the choice of pollinators. Although females and hermaphroditic flowers in
T. argentea
attracted the same assemblage of pollinator species, including Apidae, Syrphidae and
Utetheisa lotrix
(Arctiidae), the reduction in allocation to pollinator-attracting structures (corolla) and rewarding products caused a significant reduction in Apidae visitation to female flowers. Accordingly,
T. argentea
is another example of a gynodioecious species of flowering plants in Boraginaceae with clear sexual dimorphism occurring in oceanic islands. The sexual system in
T. argentea
may imply a transitional stage in the evolution to dioecy and may have been favored during colonization to newly reclaimed habitats, where mating partners may be limited. |
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ISSN: | 0378-2697 1615-6110 2199-6881 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00606-020-01698-0 |