Am Nat. 2025 Nov;206(5):452-466. doi: 10.1086/737646. Epub 2025 Sep 11.
ABSTRACT
AbstractIn simultaneous hermaphrodites, resource availability and the temporal distribution of mates determine male and female fitness and optimal sex allocation. In insect-pollinated plants, we expect individuals to allocate more to their female function when they are large and more to their male function when other individuals have many ovules available to be fertilized. Here, we studied the dependence of sex allocation and male and female components of reproductive success on both the size and the timing of reproduction in the plant Pulsatilla alpina (Ranunculaceae), accounting for inbreeding depression and variation in the mating system. Female reproductive success depended positively on size, whereas male reproductive success depended on mate availability and the timing of flowering, as predicted. Moreover, male reproductive success trended to a saturating function of allocation to stamens, whereas female reproductive success was a slightly accelerating function of pistil production. These results provide new insights into the reproductive strategies of perennial plants and help to explain the joint strategy in P. alpina of andromonoecy (the production of both male and bisexual flowers by individuals over the course of their lives) and gender diphasy (a shift between a male and a hermaphrodite phase among seasons).
PMID:41172335 | DOI:10.1086/737646
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