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      Sex‐specific outbreeding advantages and sexual dimorphism in the seedlings of dioecious trees

      1 , 2 , 2 , 3
      American Journal of Botany
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Premise

          Dioecious trees are important components of many forest ecosystems. Outbreeding advantage and sexual dimorphism are two major mechanisms that explain the persistence of dioecious plants; however, they have rarely been studied in dioecious trees.

          Methods

          We investigated the influence of sex and genetic distance between parental trees (GDPT) on the growth and functional traits of multiple seedlings of a dioecious tree, Diospyros morrisiana.

          Results

          We found significant positive relationships between GDPT and seedling sizes and tissue density. However, the positive outbreeding effects on seedling growth mainly manifested in female seedlings, but were not prominent in males. Among seedlings, the male ones generally had higher biomass and leaf area than female seedlings, but such differences diminished as GDPT increased.

          Conclusions

          Our research highlights that outbreeding advantage in plants can be sex‐specific and that sexual dimorphism begins from the seedling stage of dioecious trees.

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          Most cited references51

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          Is Open Access

          GenAlEx 6.5: genetic analysis in Excel. Population genetic software for teaching and research—an update

          Summary: GenAlEx: Genetic Analysis in Excel is a cross-platform package for population genetic analyses that runs within Microsoft Excel. GenAlEx offers analysis of diploid codominant, haploid and binary genetic loci and DNA sequences. Both frequency-based (F-statistics, heterozygosity, HWE, population assignment, relatedness) and distance-based (AMOVA, PCoA, Mantel tests, multivariate spatial autocorrelation) analyses are provided. New features include calculation of new estimators of population structure: G′ST, G′′ST, Jost’s D est and F′ST through AMOVA, Shannon Information analysis, linkage disequilibrium analysis for biallelic data and novel heterogeneity tests for spatial autocorrelation analysis. Export to more than 30 other data formats is provided. Teaching tutorials and expanded step-by-step output options are included. The comprehensive guide has been fully revised. Availability and implementation: GenAlEx is written in VBA and provided as a Microsoft Excel Add-in (compatible with Excel 2003, 2007, 2010 on PC; Excel 2004, 2011 on Macintosh). GenAlEx, and supporting documentation and tutorials are freely available at: http://biology.anu.edu.au/GenAlEx. Contact: rod.peakall@anu.edu.au
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            genepop'007: a complete re-implementation of the genepop software for Windows and Linux.

            This note summarizes developments of the genepop software since its first description in 1995, and in particular those new to version 4.0: an extended input format, several estimators of neighbourhood size under isolation by distance, new estimators and confidence intervals for null allele frequency, and less important extensions to previous options. genepop now runs under Linux as well as under Windows, and can be entirely controlled by batch calls. © 2007 The Author.
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              The global spectrum of plant form and function.

              Earth is home to a remarkable diversity of plant forms and life histories, yet comparatively few essential trait combinations have proved evolutionarily viable in today's terrestrial biosphere. By analysing worldwide variation in six major traits critical to growth, survival and reproduction within the largest sample of vascular plant species ever compiled, we found that occupancy of six-dimensional trait space is strongly concentrated, indicating coordination and trade-offs. Three-quarters of trait variation is captured in a two-dimensional global spectrum of plant form and function. One major dimension within this plane reflects the size of whole plants and their parts; the other represents the leaf economics spectrum, which balances leaf construction costs against growth potential. The global plant trait spectrum provides a backdrop for elucidating constraints on evolution, for functionally qualifying species and ecosystems, and for improving models that predict future vegetation based on continuous variation in plant form and function.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                American Journal of Botany
                American J of Botany
                Wiley
                0002-9122
                1537-2197
                April 2023
                April 03 2023
                April 2023
                : 110
                : 4
                Affiliations
                [1 ] College of Life and Environmental Sciences Wenzhou University Wenzhou 325000 China
                [2 ] State Key Laboratory of Biocontrol School of Ecology, Sun Yat‐sen University Guangzhou China
                [3 ] Département de Biologie Université de Sherbrooke Sherbrooke QC Canada
                Article
                10.1002/ajb2.16153
                36905311
                fb564fac-9a0e-4645-b592-e2fe42a7f9f3
                © 2023

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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