4.7 Article

Reproductive ecology of the African baobab: Floral features differ among individuals with different fruit production

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 489, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2021.119077

Keywords

Floral morphology; Fruit production; Malvaceae; Plant reproduction; Sexual systems

Categories

Funding

  1. DST-NRF Center of Excellence for Tree Health Biotechnology [40945]

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The study reveals that the fruit production of African baobabs is related to floral features, with trees producing more fruits tending to have more female flowers, while trees with lower fruit production have more male flowers. This suggests a potential sex allocation shift in baobabs, emphasizing the importance of maintaining both types of trees in the landscape for sustainable harvesting of fruits and seeds.
The long observed disparity in fruit production among individual trees of the iconic African baobab, Adansonia digitata L. presents a potential challenge for the supply of fruit and seeds for food, medicinal and cosmetic purposes. Moreover, this disparity presents an unsolved mystery with ecological as well as economic implications. African baobabs are hermaphrodites where flowers have both male and female reproductive organs within the same flower. Here we evaluate the reproductive features, pollen-pistil interactions, and pollinator-attractant traits from South African baobabs to investigate whether trees with different fruit production levels have different floral features. We show that morphological traits highlight functional sex differences that match with average fruit production data of our sampled trees. Trees that produce more fruit comprised more functionally female flowers, whereas more functionally male flowers were characteristic of trees that did not produce many fruits. This difference may signify a shift in sex allocation in African baobabs, which suggests that baobabs might be functionally, or cryptically, dioecious. Collectively our data suggest that maintaining both tree types within a landscape is paramount for long-term sustainable harvesting of baobab fruit and seeds.

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