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Family affiliation,sex ratio and sporophyte frequency in unisexual mosses
Authors:Irene Bisang  Johan Ehrlén  Christin Persson  Lars Hedenäs
Affiliation:1. Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History, , SE – 104 05 Stockholm, Sweden;2. Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, University of Stockholm, , SE – 106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract:Patterns of sex expression and sex ratios are key features of the life histories of organisms. Bryophytes are the only haploid‐dominant land plants. In contrast with seed plants, more than half of bryophyte species are dioecious, with rare sexual expression and sporophyte formation and a commonly female‐biased sex ratio. We asked whether variation in sex expression, sex ratio and sporophyte frequency in ten dioecious pleurocarpous wetland mosses of two different families was best explained by assuming that character states evolved: (1) in ancestors within the respective families or (2) at the species level as a response to recent habitat conditions. Lasso regression shrinkage identified relationships between family membership and sex ratio and sporophyte frequency, whereas environmental conditions were not correlated with any investigated reproductive trait. Sex ratio and sporophyte frequency were correlated with each other. Our results suggest that ancestry is more important than the current environment in explaining reproductive patterns at and above the species level in the studied wetland mosses, and that mechanisms controlling sex ratio and sporophyte frequency are phylogenetically conserved. Obviously, ancestry should be considered in the study of reproductive character state variation in plants. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2014, 174 , 163–172.
Keywords:bryophytes  phylogeny  plant sex ratio regulation  pleurocarpous mosses  sex expression  wetlands
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