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Nutritional Dimorphism in New Guinea Dioecious Figs
Authors:George D. Weiblen  Silvia B. Lomascolo  Ryoko Oono  Elizabeth R. Dumont
Affiliation:1. Bell Museum and Department of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, 250 Biological Sciences Building, 1445 Gortner Avenue, Saint Paul, Minnesota 55108, U.S.A.

1Corresponding author;2. e-mail: gweiblen@umn.edu;3. Department of Zoology, PO Box 118525, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, U.S.A.

2Current address: IADIZA – CCT Mendoza, CONICET, Ave Ruiz Leal s/n, CC 505, Mendoza 5500, Argentina;4. Department of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, 250 Biological Sciences Building, 1445 Gortner Avenue, Saint Paul, Minnesota 55108, U.S.A.;5. Department of Biology, Morrill Science Center, 611 North Pleasant Street, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003, U.S.A.

Abstract:The life history of figs (Ficus, Moraceae) involves pollination by specialized insects and seed dispersal by vertebrate frugivores. This three-way interaction raises the possibility of conflict between pollinators and seed dispersers over fig resources. The conflict might be mediated in dioecious figs by the segregation of inflorescences with specialized male and female sexual functions, termed gall figs and seed figs, on separate trees. In dioecious figs, pollinators are intimately associated with gall figs, whereas vertebrate frugivores prefer seed figs and disperse the seeds they contain. Optimal foraging theory predicts that frugivore preference for ripe seed figs is associated with superior nutritional quality when compared to gall figs. We tested this prediction comparing nutrient and mineral properties of ripe figs in 12 functionally dioecious and two monoecious species from New Guinea. Analyses of variance indicated that gall figs contain more fiber and minerals, whereas seed figs contain significantly more carbohydrates and fat. Fruit bats, the primary dispersers of dioecious figs in New Guinea, prefer carbohydrate-rich diets, and from this perspective, seed figs offer a greater nutritional reward than gall figs. More nondigestible fiber in gall figs than seed figs would appear to discourage frugivory. Parallel differences between ripe gall figs and seed figs occur in each independent dioecious lineage whereas nutritional content in monoecious figs is more similar to seed figs. This suggests that sexual dimorphism in nutritional quality might be adaptive and associated with the maintenance of functional dioecy in figs.
Keywords:dioecy  fig  frugivores  minerals  nutrients  Papua New Guinea
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