• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Unusual positional effects on flower sex in an andromonoecious tree : Resource competition, architectural constraints, or inhibition by the apical flower?
  • Contributor: Granado-Yela, Carlos; Balaguer, Luis; Cayuela, Luis; Méndez, Marcos
  • imprint: Botanical Society of America, Inc., 2017
  • Published in: American Journal of Botany
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 0002-9122; 1537-2197
  • Keywords: RESEARCH ARTICLE
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <sec> <label>PREMISE OF THE STUDY:</label> <p>Two, nonmutually exclusive, mechanisms—competition for resources and architectural constraints—have been proposed to explain the proximal to distal decline in flower size, mass, and/or femaleness in indeterminate, elongate inflorescences. Whether these mechanisms also explain unusual positional effects such as distal to proximal declines of floral performance in determinate inflorescences, is understudied.</p> </sec> <sec> <label>METHODS:</label> <p>We tested the relative influence of these mechanisms in the andromonoecious wild olive tree, where hermaphroditic flowers occur mainly on apical and the most proximal positions in determinate inflorescences. We experimentally increased the availability of resources for the inflorescences by removing half of the inflorescences per twig or reduced resource availability by removing leaves. We also removed the apical flower to test its inhibitory effect on subapical flowers.</p> </sec> <sec> <label>KEY RESULTS:</label> <p>The apical flower had the highest probability of being hermaphroditic. Further down, however, the probability of finding a hermaphroditic flower decreased from the base to the tip of the inflorescences. An experimental increase of resources increased the probability of finding hermaphroditic flowers at each position, and vice versa. Removal of the apical flower increased the probability of producing hermaphroditic flowers in proximal positions but not in subapical positions.</p> </sec> <sec> <label>CONCLUSIONS:</label> <p>These results indicate an interaction between resource competition and architectural constraints in influencing the arrangement of the hermaphroditic and male flowers within the inflorescences of the wild olive tree. Subapical flowers did not seem to be hormonally suppressed by apical flowers. The study of these unusual positional effects is needed for a general understanding about the functional implications of inflorescence architecture.</p> </sec>
  • Access State: Open Access