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Dryad

Data from: Geographic range size is predicted by plant mating system

Cite this dataset

Grossenbacher, Dena; Briscoe Runquist, Ryan; Goldberg, Emma E.; Brandvain, Yaniv (2015). Data from: Geographic range size is predicted by plant mating system [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.hv117

Abstract

Species' geographic ranges vary enormously, and even closest relatives may differ in range size by several orders of magnitude. With data from hundreds of species spanning 20 genera in 15 families, we show that plant species that autonomously reproduce via self-pollination consistently have larger geographic ranges than their close relatives that generally require two parents for reproduction. Further analyses strongly implicate autonomous self-fertilisation in causing this relationship, as it is not driven by traits such as polyploidy or annual life history whose evolution is sometimes correlated with selfing. Furthermore, we find that selfers occur at higher maximum latitudes and that disparity in range size between selfers and outcrossers increases with time since their evolutionary divergence. Together, these results show that autonomous reproduction—a critical biological trait that eliminates mate limitation and thus potentially increases the probability of establishment—increases range size.

Usage notes

Location

South America
Asia
Europe
Africa
Australia
North America