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(American Journal of Botany. 2002;89:1907-1915.)
© 2002 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Reproductive Biology

The transition to gender dimorphism on an evolutionary background of self-incompatibility: an example from Lycium (Solanaceae)1

Jill S. Miller2,4 and D. Lawrence Venable3

2Department of Biology, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts 01002 USA; 3Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721 USA

Populations of three North American species of Lycium (Solanaceae) are morphologically gynodioecious and consist of male-sterile (i.e., female) and hermaphroditic plants. Marked individuals were consistent in sexual expression across years and male sterility was present throughout much of the species' ranges. Controlled pollinations reveal that L. californicum, L. exsertum, and L. fremontii are functionally dioecious. Fruit production in females ranged from 36 to 63%, whereas hermaphrodites functioned essentially as males. Though hermaphrodites were mostly male, investigation of pollen tube growth reveals that hermaphrodites of all dimorphic species were self-compatible. Self-fertilization and consequent inbreeding depression are commonly invoked as important selective forces promoting the invasion of male-sterile mutants into cosexual populations. A corollary prediction of these models is that gender dimorphism evolves from self-compatible ancestors. However, fruit production, seed production, and pollen tube number following outcross pollination were significantly higher than following self-pollination for three diploid, cosexual species that are closely related to the dimorphic species. The data presented here on incompatibility systems are consistent with the hypothesis that polyploidy disrupted the self-incompatibility system in the gynodioecious species leading to the evolution of gender dimorphism.

Key Words: breeding systems • dioecy • gynodioecy • Lycium • polyploidy • self-compatibility • self-incompatibility • Solanaceae




This article has been cited by other articles:


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G. J. Anderson, G. Bernardello, M. R. Opel, A. Santos-Guerra, and M. Anderson
Reproductive biology of the dioecious Canary Islands endemic Withania aristata (Solanaceae)
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R. A. Levin and J. S. Miller
Relationships within tribe Lycieae (Solanaceae): paraphyly of Lycium and multiple origins of gender dimorphism
Am. J. Botany, December 1, 2005; 92(12): 2044 - 2053.
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