sexual specialization
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2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 1110
Author(s):  
Olga Semenova ◽  
Julia Apalkova ◽  
Marina Butovskaya

Despite the enforced lockdown regime in late March 2020 in Russia, the phenomenon of the continued virus spreading highlighted the importance of studies investigating the range of biosocial attributes and spectrum of individual motivations underlying the permanent presence of the substantial level of spatial activity. For this matter, we conducted a set of surveys between March and June 2020 (N = 492). We found that an individual’s health attitude is the most consistent factor explaining mobility differences. However, our data suggested that wariness largely determines adequate health attitudes; hence, a higher level of wariness indirectly reduced individual mobility. Comparative analysis revealed the critical biosocial differences between the two sexes, potentially rooted in the human evolutionary past. Females were predisposed to express more wariness in the face of new environmental risks; therefore, they minimize their mobility and outdoor contacts. In contrast to them, the general level of spatial activity reported by males was significantly higher. Wariness in the males’ sample was less associated with the novel virus threat, but to a great extent, it was predicted by the potential economic losses variable. These findings correspond to the evolutionary predictions of sexual specialization and the division of family roles.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis Santos del Blanco ◽  
Eleri Tudor ◽  
John R. Pannell

AbstractEvolutionary transitions from dioecy to hermaphroditism must overcome the inertia of sexual dimorphism because modified males or females will express the opposite sexual function for which their phenotypes have been optimized. We tested this prediction by comparing the siring success of female-derived hermaphrodites of the plant Mercurialis annua with males and hermaphrodites that present a male-like inflorescence. We found that pollen dispersed by female-derived hermaphrodites was about a third poorer at siring outcross offspring than that from hermaphrodites with male-like inflorescences, illustrating the notion that a ‘ghost of dioecy past’ compromises the fitness of derived hermaphrodites in outcrossing populations. We conclude that whereas dioecy might evolve from hermaphroditism by conferring upon individuals certain benefits of sexual specialization, reversals from dioecy to hermaphroditism must often be limited to situations in which outcrossing cannot be maintained and inbreeding is favored. Our study provides novel empirical support for evolutionary models for the breakdown of dioecy.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rubén Torices ◽  
Ana Afonso ◽  
Arne A. Anderberg ◽  
José M. Gómez ◽  
Marcos Méndez

ABSTRACTMale and female unisexual flowers have repeatedly evolved from the ancestral bisexual flowers in different lineages of flowering plants. This sex specialization in different flowers often occurs within inflorescences. We hypothesize that inflorescence architecture may impose a constraint on resource availability for late flowers, potentially leading to different optima in floral sex allocation and unisexuality. Under this hypothesis we expect that inflorescence traits increasing the difference in resource availability between early and late flowers would be phylogenetically correlated with a higher level of sexual specialization. To test this hypothesis, we performed a comparative analysis of inflorescence traits (inflorescence size, number of flowers and flower density) in the sunflower family, which displays an extraordinary variation in floral sexual specialization at the inflorescence level, i.e. hermaphroditic, gynomonoecious and monoecious species. We found that species with a complete sex separation in unisexual flowers (monoecy) had significantly denser inflorescences. Furthermore, those species arranging their flowers in denser inflorescences also showed greater differences in the size of early and late fruits, a proxy of resource variation between flowers. Our findings support the idea that floral sexual specialization and consequently sexual segregation may be the consequence of different floral sex allocation optima driven by the sequential development of flowers that results in a persistent resource decline from earlier to later flowers.


2018 ◽  
Vol 285 (1873) ◽  
pp. 20180004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Saumitou-Laprade ◽  
Philippe Vernet ◽  
Arnaud Dowkiw ◽  
Sylvain Bertrand ◽  
Sylvain Billiard ◽  
...  

How flowering plants have recurrently evolved from hermaphroditism to separate sexes (dioecy) is a central question in evolutionary biology. Here, we investigate whether diallelic self-incompatibility (DSI) is associated with sexual specialization in the polygamous common ash ( Fraxinus excelsior ), which would ultimately facilitate the evolution towards dioecy. Using interspecific crosses, we provide evidence of strong relationships between the DSI system and sexual phenotype. The reproductive system in F. excelsior that was previously viewed as polygamy (co-occurrence of unisexuals and hermaphrodites with varying degrees of allocation to the male and female functions) and thus appears to actually behave as a subdioecious system. Hermaphrodites and females belong to one SI group and functionally reproduce as females, whereas males and male-biased hermaphrodites belong to the other SI group and are functionally males. Our results offer an alternative mechanism for the evolution of sexual specialization in flowering plants.


2015 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shang-Yang Lin ◽  
Lien-Siang Chou ◽  
Bruno Di Giusto ◽  
Anthony Bain

Evolution ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 62 (7) ◽  
pp. 1676-1688 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriela Gleiser ◽  
Miguel Verd ◽  
Jos G. Segarra-Moragues ◽  
Santiago C. Gonzlez-Martnez ◽  
John R. Pannell

Oecologia ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 115 (3) ◽  
pp. 391-400 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aviva Patel ◽  
Doyle McKey

1997 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Carl Freeman ◽  
Jon Lovett Doust ◽  
Ali El-Keblawy ◽  
Kathleen J. Miglia ◽  
E. Durant McArthur

1937 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
pp. 417-420
Author(s):  
John Lawson Hart

Vertebral counts of capelin spawning in autumn on Vancouver Island were: males 65.65, females 65.13. Differing significantly, these demonstrate sexual dimorphism of a type rare among fishes. The sexual difference is not primarily associated with length, although there is some relationship between length and vertebral number among females. The high degree of sexual specialization in the fins is limited to size and integument and does not include meristic features.


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