Separate Sexes (separate + sex)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY OF HERMAPHRODITE SEX ALLOCATION PROMOTES THE EVOLUTION OF SEPARATE SEXES: AN EXPERIMENTAL TEST OF THE SEX-DIFFERENTIAL PLASTICITY HYPOTHESIS USING SAGITTARIA LATIFOLIA (ALISMATACEAE)

EVOLUTION, Issue 4 2008
Marcel E. Dorken
Separate sexes can evolve under nuclear inheritance when unisexuals have more than twice the reproductive fitness of hermaphrodites through one sex function (e.g., when females have more than twice the seed fertility of hermaphrodites). Because separate sexes are thought to evolve most commonly via a gynodioecious intermediate (i.e., populations in which females and hermaphrodites cooccur), the conditions under which females can become established in populations of hermaphrodites are of considerable interest. It has been proposed that resource-poor conditions could promote the establishment of females if hermaphrodites are plastic in their sex allocation and allocate fewer resources to seed production under these conditions. If this occurs, the seed fertility of females could exceed the doubling required for the evolution of unisexuality under low-, but not high-resource conditions (the sex-differential plasticity hypothesis). We tested this hypothesis using replicate experimental arrays of the aquatic herb Sagittaria latifolia grown under two fertilizer treatments. The results supported the sex-differential plasticity hypothesis, with females having more than twice the seed fertility of hermaphrodites under low-, but not high-fertilizer conditions. Our findings are consistent with the idea that separate sexes are more likely to evolve under unfavorable conditions. [source]


TESTS OF SEX ALLOCATION THEORY IN SIMULTANEOUSLY HERMAPHRODITIC ANIMALS

EVOLUTION, Issue 6 2009
Lukas Schärer
Sex allocation is a crucial life-history parameter in all sexual organisms. Over the last decades a body of evolutionary theory, sex allocation theory, was developed, which has yielded capital insight into the evolution of optimal sex allocation patterns and adaptive evolution in general. Most empirical work, however, has focused on species with separate sexes. Here I review sex allocation theory for simultaneous hermaphrodites and summarize over 50 empirical studies, which have aimed at evaluating this theory in a diversity of simultaneous hermaphrodites spanning nine animal phyla. These studies have yielded considerable qualitative support for several predictions of sex allocation theory, such as a female-biased sex allocation when the number of mates is limited, and a shift toward a more male-biased sex allocation with increasing numbers of mates. In contrast, many fundamental assumptions, such as the trade-off between male and female allocation, and numerous predictions, such as brooding limiting the returns from female allocation, are still poorly supported. Measuring sex allocation in simultaneously hermaphroditic animals remains experimentally demanding, which renders evaluation of more quantitative predictions a challenging task. I identify the main questions that need to be addressed and point to promising avenues for future research. [source]


PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY OF HERMAPHRODITE SEX ALLOCATION PROMOTES THE EVOLUTION OF SEPARATE SEXES: AN EXPERIMENTAL TEST OF THE SEX-DIFFERENTIAL PLASTICITY HYPOTHESIS USING SAGITTARIA LATIFOLIA (ALISMATACEAE)

EVOLUTION, Issue 4 2008
Marcel E. Dorken
Separate sexes can evolve under nuclear inheritance when unisexuals have more than twice the reproductive fitness of hermaphrodites through one sex function (e.g., when females have more than twice the seed fertility of hermaphrodites). Because separate sexes are thought to evolve most commonly via a gynodioecious intermediate (i.e., populations in which females and hermaphrodites cooccur), the conditions under which females can become established in populations of hermaphrodites are of considerable interest. It has been proposed that resource-poor conditions could promote the establishment of females if hermaphrodites are plastic in their sex allocation and allocate fewer resources to seed production under these conditions. If this occurs, the seed fertility of females could exceed the doubling required for the evolution of unisexuality under low-, but not high-resource conditions (the sex-differential plasticity hypothesis). We tested this hypothesis using replicate experimental arrays of the aquatic herb Sagittaria latifolia grown under two fertilizer treatments. The results supported the sex-differential plasticity hypothesis, with females having more than twice the seed fertility of hermaphrodites under low-, but not high-fertilizer conditions. Our findings are consistent with the idea that separate sexes are more likely to evolve under unfavorable conditions. [source]


CYTO-NUCLEAR EPISTASIS: TWO-LOCUS RANDOM GENETIC DRIFT IN HERMAPHRODITIC AND DIOECIOUS SPECIES

EVOLUTION, Issue 4 2006
Michael J. Wade
Abstract We report the findings of our theoretical investigation of the effect of random genetic drift on the covariance of identity-by-descent (ibd) of nuclear and cytoplasmic genes. The covariance in ibd measures of the degree to which cyto-nuclear gene combinations are heritable, that is, transmitted together from parents to offspring. We show how the mating system affects the covariance of ibd, a potentially important aspect of host-pathogen or host-symbiont coevolution. The magnitude of this covariance influences the degree to which the evolution of apparently neutral cytoplasmic genes, often used in molecular phylogenetics, might be influenced by selection acting on unlinked nuclear genes. To the extent that cyto-nuclear gene combinations are inherited together, genomic conflict is mitigated and intergenomic transfer it facilitated, because genes in both organelle and nuclear genomes share the same evolutionary fate. The covariance of ibd also affects the rate at which cyto-nuclear epistatic variance is converted to additive variance necessary for a response to selection. We find that conversion is biased in species with separate sexes, so that the increment of additive variance added to the nuclear genome exceeds that added to the cytoplasmic genome. As a result, the host might have an adaptive advantage in a coevolutionary arms race with vertically (maternally) transmitted pathogens. Similarly, the nuclear genome could be a source of compensatory mutations for its organellar genomes, as occurs in cytoplasmic male sterility in some plant species. We also discuss the possibility that adaptive cytoplasmic elements, such as favorable mitochondrial mutations or endosymbionts (e.g., Wolbachia), have the potential to release heritable nuclear variation as they sweep through a host population, supporting the view that cytoplasmic introgression plays an important role in adaptation and speciation. [source]


A polyploid population of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with separate sexes (dioecy)

FEMS YEAST RESEARCH, Issue 6 2010
Rim Al Safadi
Abstract Saccharomyces cerevisiae has proved to be an interesting model for studies of evolution, with whole-genome duplication shown to have played an important role in the evolution of this species. This phenomenon depends on the formation of a transient stable polyploid state. Previous studies have reported polyploidy to be an unstable state in yeast, but here, we describe a polyploid population of S. cerevisiae. The evolution of higher eukaryotes has also involved the development of different systems of sexual reproduction, the choice between self-fertilization and out-crossing becoming a key issue. Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a hermaphrodite eukaryote, despite the theoretical genetic disadvantages of this strategy, in which self-fertilization occurs. We describe, for the first time, a near-dioecious (with separate sexes) population in this species. Mating type and the MAT locus display complex segregations. Essentially, each strain produces, by meiosis, spores of only one mating type: mata or mat,. Moreover, strains are heterothallic, and diploid nonmating clones generated from a single spore do not sporulate. These three properties limit self-fertilization and strongly favour out-crossing. We suggest that the shift in sexual strategy, from hermaphroditism to dioecy, is specific to the brewing process, which overcomes the sexual isolation probably found in natural biotopes. [source]


Sexual dimorphism and the genetic potential for evolution of sex allocation in the gynodioecious plant, Schiedea salicaria

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2008
A. K. SAKAI
Abstract Sex allocation theory addresses how separate sexes can evolve from hermaphroditism but little is known about the genetic potential for shifts in sex allocation in flowering plants. We tested assumptions of this theory using the common currency of biomass and measurements of narrow-sense heritabilities and genetic correlations in Schiedea salicaria, a gynodioecious species under selection for greater differentiation of the sexes. Female (carpel) biomass showed heritable variation in both sexes. Male (stamen) biomass in hermaphrodites also had significant heritability, suggesting the potential for further evolution of dioecy. Significant positive genetic correlations between females and hermaphrodites in carpel mass may slow differentiation between the sexes. Within hermaphrodites, there were no negative genetic correlations between male and female biomass as assumed by models for the evolution of dioecy, suggesting that S. salicaria is capable of further changes in biomass allocation to male and female functions and evolution toward dioecy. [source]


Polyploidy and the sexual system: what can we learn from Mercurialis annua?

BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 4 2004
JOHN R. PANNELL
The evolutionary success of polyploidy most directly requires the ability of polyploid individuals to reproduce and transmit their genes to subsequent generations. As a result, the sexual system (i.e. the mating system and the sex allocation of a species) will necessarily play a key role in determining the fate of a new polyploid lineage. The effects of the sexual system on the evolution of polyploidy are complex and interactive. They include both aspects of the genetic system, the genetic load maintained in a population and the ecological context in which selection takes place. Here, we explore these complexities and review the empirical evidence for several potentially important genetic and ecological interactions between ploidy and the sexual system in plants. We place particular emphasis on work in our laboratory on the European annual plant Mercurialis annua, which offers promising scope for detailed investigations on this topic. M. annua forms a polyploid complex that varies in its sexual system from dioecy (separate sexes) through androdioecy (males and hermaphrodites) to functional hermaphroditism. © 2004 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2004, 82, 547,560. [source]