| Literature DB >> 30411338 |
Emily L Bruns1, Ian Miller1,2, Michael E Hood3, Valentina Carasso4, Janis Antonovics1.
Abstract
In flowering plants, the evolution of females is widely hypothesized to be the first step in the evolutionary pathway to separate male and female sexes, or dioecy. Natural enemies have the potential to drive this evolution if they preferentially attack hermaphrodites over females. We studied sex-based differences in exposure to anther-smut (Microbotryum), a sterilizing pollinator-transmitted disease, in Dianthus pavonius, a gynodioecious perennial herb. We found that within a heavily diseased population, females consistently had lower levels of Microbotryum spore deposition relative to hermaphrodites and that this difference was driven by rapid floral closing in females following successful pollination. We further show that this protective closing behavior is frequency dependent; females close faster when they are rare. These results indicate that anther-smut disease is an important source of selection for females, especially since we found in a common garden experiment no evidence that females have any inherent fecundity advantages over hermaphrodites. Finally, we show that among populations, those where anther-smut is present have a significantly higher frequency of females than those where the disease is absent. Taken together our results indicate that anther-smut disease is likely an important biotic factor driving the evolution and maintenance of females in this gynodioecious species.Entities:
Keywords: Mating systems; floral closing; frequency-dependent selection; gynodioecy; inbreeding depression; natural enemies; parasitism; sex ratio
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30411338 PMCID: PMC6610882 DOI: 10.1111/evo.13640
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694