Data from: Sexual selection on male but not female function in monoecious and dioecious populations of broadleaf arrowhead (Sagittaria latifolia)
Data files
Oct 30, 2022 version files 239.76 KB
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ColonyInput_rr2_20210630.txt
41.60 KB
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ColonyInput_tas_20210624.txt
42.58 KB
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flowering_rr2.csv
11.19 KB
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flowering_tas.csv
12.58 KB
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Mating_Output_rr2.Paternity
5.23 KB
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Mating_Output_tas.Paternity
5.57 KB
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mlgs_rr2.csv
15.74 KB
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mlgs_tas.csv
15.12 KB
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plant_size_rr2.csv
14.42 KB
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plant_size_tas.csv
14.99 KB
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README_Kwok_Dorken_2022.txt
6.94 KB
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SeedGenotypes_shootIds_rr2.csv
29.78 KB
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SeedGenotypes_shootIds_tas.csv
24.03 KB
Abstract
Direct measures of sexual selection in plants are rare and complicated by modular growth. Because of modularity, instantaneous measures of fitness scale with size, but size variation in plants is largely non-heritable, obscuring patterns of selection on heritable variation. We measured the magnitude of sexual selection in a monoecious and a dioecious population of the clonal plant Sagittaria latifolia using Bateman gradients (ßss). These gradients were calculated using parentage analysis and residual regression to account for the effects of shoot and clone size on mating and reproductive success. In both populations: (i) mating via male function was associated with greater promiscuity; and (ii) ßss were positive, with significant associations between mating and reproductive success for male but not female function. Moreover, estimated ßss were similar for the monoecious and dioecious populations, possibly because non-overlapping female and male sex phases in hermaphroditic S. latifolia reduces the scope for interference between sex functions during mating. This study builds on previous studies of selection on plant mating traits, and of sexual selection under experimental conditions by showing that sexual selection can operate in natural populations of plants, including populations of hermaphrodites.
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