4.5 Article

The cost of realized sexual reproduction: Assessing patterns of reproductive allocation and sporophyte abortion in a desert moss

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 87, Issue 11, Pages 1599-1608

Publisher

BOTANICAL SOC AMER INC
DOI: 10.2307/2656736

Keywords

allocation; bryophyte; cost of sex; cryptogamic crust; desert; haploid dioecy; sex ratios; sporophyte abortion; Syntrichia caninervis

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The desert moss Syntrichia caninervis exhibits one of the most skewed sex ratios in the plant kingdom, with female individuals far outnumbering male individuals (exceeding 14 female :1 male). The cost of sex hypothesis derives from allocational theory and predicts that the sex which is most expensive should be the rarer sex. This hypothesis, which. as considered here represents the realized cost of sexual reproduction, is contingent upon two assumptions that are explored: (1) that male sex expression is more expensive than female sex expression, and (2) that sexual reproduction is resource limited. Using inflorescence biomass and discounting sperm, male sex expression was found to be in the neighborhood of one order of magnitude more expensive than female sex expression, and this difference is reflected in higher numbers of gametangia per male inflorescence, presence of paraphyses in male inflorescences, and a much longer developmental time for male inflorescences. The realized cost of female reproduction from two communities dominated by S, caninervis was found to be lower than the realized cost of male sexual reproduction. Resource-limited reproduction was assessed by determining the frequency of sporophyte abortion, the age distribution of sporophyte abortions, and patterns of sporophyte abortion that may be density dependent. Among ten sexually reproducing populations, abortive sporophytes occurred at a frequency of 0.64. Abortive sporophytes averaged 8% the mass of mature sporophytes, and cohort sporophytes from the same individual female were found to abort in a density-dependent pattern. We conclude that the two assumptions, upon which the cost of sex hypothesis depends, are supported.

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