Functional androdioecy in the ornamental shrub Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae).

Androdioecy is one of the rarest sexual systems among plants, characterized by males co-occurring with hermaphrodites. Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae), an ornamental shrub from southern China, is known to have both male and hermaphrodite individuals, but little is known regarding the breeding system o...

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Main Authors: Yifan Duan, Weihong Li, Sunyuan Zheng, Steven Paul Sylvester, Yongfu Li, Fuyue Cai, Cheng Zhang, Xianrong Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221898
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spelling doaj-4ca7accd05324fdd8bd9c9fe7a88e64e2021-03-03T21:14:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01149e022189810.1371/journal.pone.0221898Functional androdioecy in the ornamental shrub Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae).Yifan DuanWeihong LiSunyuan ZhengSteven Paul SylvesterYongfu LiFuyue CaiCheng ZhangXianrong WangAndrodioecy is one of the rarest sexual systems among plants, characterized by males co-occurring with hermaphrodites. Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae), an ornamental shrub from southern China, is known to have both male and hermaphrodite individuals, but little is known regarding the breeding system of this species and whether it is functionally androdioecious, and how this potentially evolved. In this study, we explore the characteristics of the breeding system of O. delavayi through the study of phenology, sex ratio, floral organ morphology, pollen number, stigma receptivity, artificial pollination, pollinators, and gene flow within and between populations, while also discussing the evolution and maintenance of androdioecy within the genus. The proportion of males was less than 0.5 and the out-crossing index (OCI) was 5. Morphological androdioecy was observed, with hermaphrodite flowers having fertile pistils, while male flowers had degenerated pistils. Males and hermaphrodites both had large amounts of small and fertile pollen grains, although the pollen number of males was ca. 1.21 × more than that of hermaphrodites, and pollen was generally smaller. Self-pollination was found to produce a much lower fruit set than outcrossing under natural conditions. Gene flow between males and hermaphrodites within a population was greater (1.007) than that between populations (0.753). All these results indicate that O. delavayi is functionally androdioecious, which may be an intermediate state in the evolutionary transition from hermaphroditism to dioecy.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221898
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yifan Duan
Weihong Li
Sunyuan Zheng
Steven Paul Sylvester
Yongfu Li
Fuyue Cai
Cheng Zhang
Xianrong Wang
spellingShingle Yifan Duan
Weihong Li
Sunyuan Zheng
Steven Paul Sylvester
Yongfu Li
Fuyue Cai
Cheng Zhang
Xianrong Wang
Functional androdioecy in the ornamental shrub Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae).
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yifan Duan
Weihong Li
Sunyuan Zheng
Steven Paul Sylvester
Yongfu Li
Fuyue Cai
Cheng Zhang
Xianrong Wang
author_sort Yifan Duan
title Functional androdioecy in the ornamental shrub Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae).
title_short Functional androdioecy in the ornamental shrub Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae).
title_full Functional androdioecy in the ornamental shrub Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae).
title_fullStr Functional androdioecy in the ornamental shrub Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae).
title_full_unstemmed Functional androdioecy in the ornamental shrub Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae).
title_sort functional androdioecy in the ornamental shrub osmanthus delavayi (oleaceae).
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Androdioecy is one of the rarest sexual systems among plants, characterized by males co-occurring with hermaphrodites. Osmanthus delavayi (Oleaceae), an ornamental shrub from southern China, is known to have both male and hermaphrodite individuals, but little is known regarding the breeding system of this species and whether it is functionally androdioecious, and how this potentially evolved. In this study, we explore the characteristics of the breeding system of O. delavayi through the study of phenology, sex ratio, floral organ morphology, pollen number, stigma receptivity, artificial pollination, pollinators, and gene flow within and between populations, while also discussing the evolution and maintenance of androdioecy within the genus. The proportion of males was less than 0.5 and the out-crossing index (OCI) was 5. Morphological androdioecy was observed, with hermaphrodite flowers having fertile pistils, while male flowers had degenerated pistils. Males and hermaphrodites both had large amounts of small and fertile pollen grains, although the pollen number of males was ca. 1.21 × more than that of hermaphrodites, and pollen was generally smaller. Self-pollination was found to produce a much lower fruit set than outcrossing under natural conditions. Gene flow between males and hermaphrodites within a population was greater (1.007) than that between populations (0.753). All these results indicate that O. delavayi is functionally androdioecious, which may be an intermediate state in the evolutionary transition from hermaphroditism to dioecy.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221898
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