TY - JOUR
T1 - Correlates of monoicy and dioicy in hornworts, the apparent sister group to vascular plants
AU - Villarreal, Juan Carlos
AU - Renner, Susanne S.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank, D. C. Cargill (Australian National Herbarium, CANB), S. Chantanaorrapint (Songkla University, Thailand), B. Goffinet (University of Connecticut), K. Hylander (Stockholm University), T. Peng and R.-L. Zhu (Herbaria of East China Normal University), S. Pressel and J.G. Duckett (Natural History Museum, London), J. Shevock (California Academy of Sciences), and H. Stieperaere (National Botanical Garden of Belgium for plant material; D. C. Cargill for a sequences of A. fragilis; L. L. Forrest and A. Forrest (Royal Botanical Garden Edinburgh) for the matK primer and laboratory support, and N. Cusimano in our lab in Munich for providing an R script for Figure 1. Three anonymous reviewers provided constructive comments that improved the manuscript. Financial support came from the DFG grant RE-603/14-1 and SYNTHESYS GB-TAF-1893.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Background: Whether male and female gametes are produced by single or separate individuals shapes plant mating and hence patterns of genetic diversity among and within populations. Haploid-dominant plants ("bryophytes": liverworts, mosses and hornworts) can have unisexual (dioicous) or bisexual (monoicous) gametophytes, and today, 68% of liverwort species, 57% of moss species, and 40% of hornwort species are dioicous. The transitions between the two sexual systems and possible correlations with other traits have been studied in liverworts and mosses, but not hornworts. Here we use a phylogeny for 98 of the 200 species of hornworts, the sister group to vascular plants, representing roughly equal proportions of all monoicous and all dioicous species, to test whether transitions in sexual systems are predominantly from monoicy to dioicy as might be expected based on studies of mosses. We further investigate possible correlations between sexual system and spore size, antheridium number, ploidy level, and diversification rate, with character selection partly based on findings in mosses and liverworts. Results: Hornworts underwent numerous transitions between monoicy and dioicy. The transition rate from dioicy to monoicy was 2× higher than in the opposite direction, but monoicous groups have higher extinction rates; diversification rates do not correlate with sexual system. A correlation important in mosses, that between monoicy and polyploidy, apparently plays a small role: of 20 species with chromosome counts, only one is polyploid, the monoicous Anthoceros punctatus. A contingency test revealed that transitions to dioicy were more likely in species with small spores, supporting the hypothesis that small but numerous spores may be advantageous for dioicous species that depend on dense carpets of gametophytes for reproductive assurance. However, we found no evidence for increased antheridium-per-chamber numbers in dioicous species. Conclusions: Sexual systems in hornworts are labile, and the higher number of extant monoicous species (60%) may be largely due to frequent transitions to monoicy.
AB - Background: Whether male and female gametes are produced by single or separate individuals shapes plant mating and hence patterns of genetic diversity among and within populations. Haploid-dominant plants ("bryophytes": liverworts, mosses and hornworts) can have unisexual (dioicous) or bisexual (monoicous) gametophytes, and today, 68% of liverwort species, 57% of moss species, and 40% of hornwort species are dioicous. The transitions between the two sexual systems and possible correlations with other traits have been studied in liverworts and mosses, but not hornworts. Here we use a phylogeny for 98 of the 200 species of hornworts, the sister group to vascular plants, representing roughly equal proportions of all monoicous and all dioicous species, to test whether transitions in sexual systems are predominantly from monoicy to dioicy as might be expected based on studies of mosses. We further investigate possible correlations between sexual system and spore size, antheridium number, ploidy level, and diversification rate, with character selection partly based on findings in mosses and liverworts. Results: Hornworts underwent numerous transitions between monoicy and dioicy. The transition rate from dioicy to monoicy was 2× higher than in the opposite direction, but monoicous groups have higher extinction rates; diversification rates do not correlate with sexual system. A correlation important in mosses, that between monoicy and polyploidy, apparently plays a small role: of 20 species with chromosome counts, only one is polyploid, the monoicous Anthoceros punctatus. A contingency test revealed that transitions to dioicy were more likely in species with small spores, supporting the hypothesis that small but numerous spores may be advantageous for dioicous species that depend on dense carpets of gametophytes for reproductive assurance. However, we found no evidence for increased antheridium-per-chamber numbers in dioicous species. Conclusions: Sexual systems in hornworts are labile, and the higher number of extant monoicous species (60%) may be largely due to frequent transitions to monoicy.
KW - Chromosome counts
KW - Sexual systems
KW - Spore size
KW - Trait correlation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84886731174&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/1471-2148-13-239
DO - 10.1186/1471-2148-13-239
M3 - Article
C2 - 24180692
AN - SCOPUS:84886731174
SN - 1471-2148
VL - 13
JO - BMC Evolutionary Biology
JF - BMC Evolutionary Biology
IS - 1
M1 - 239
ER -