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Plants have evolved strategies to maintain photosynthesis and mitigate tissue-damaging high light. In some dioecious seed plants, these strategies are sexually dimorphic and are linked to spatial segregation of the sexes (SSS) along light gradients. In vascular tissue-free plants (bryophytes) with separate sexes, SSS is common, but how light gradients, sexual dimorphisms, and SSS correlate is not well understood. To test if sexual dimorphisms in vegetative or sexual stages lead to light-associated SSS in bryophytes, we used whose males occupy a wider range of light conditions, including higher light conditions, than females. We also tested if changes in development differed between sexes. We grew 25 males and 25 females in a glasshouse with clones in low and high light and assessed pigment and biomass allocation traits in vegetative and sexual thalli (analogous to leaves), representing non-sexual and sexually reproductive stages. We expected males to exhibit traits consistent with high light acclimation more than females and greater sex differences in sexual thalli due to specialization. Further, we reasoned that males would change more between stages than females. For sexual thalli, males had higher carotenoid/chlorophyll ratios (consistent with expectation), while females had higher chlorophyll ratios and dry matter content (opposite from expectations). Vegetative thalli were not sexually dimorphic but were more plastic to light than sexual thalli. Overall, the stages differed more for males than females, but without regard for light. However, female stages differed more for dry matter content. Males generally need greater change in pigmentation and biomass allocation than females between stages, and we posit links for individual traits to sex function. Specialization in sexual thalli constrains their plasticity to light compared to vegetative thalli. Yet, neither sexual dimorphism in sexual thalli nor greater change between stages for males than females clearly leads to light-associated SSS.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plaf010 | DOI Listing |
The red macroalga invasion provides an opportunity to investigate the evolution of biphasic life cycles and of reproductive modes by understanding how they structure and contribute colonizing new environments in natural conditions. In hard bottom habitats, we find gametophytes and tetrasporophytes fixed by holdfasts to hard substrates, whereas in soft bottom habitats, we find free-living tetrasporophytes either drifting or anchored by tube-building polychaetes. We collected thalli from hard and soft bottom habitats along the Eastern Shore of Virginia and Maryland to investigate the role of substrate on life cycle and reproductive mode dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAoB Plants
February 2025
Department of Biology, University of Kentucky, 101 T.H. Morgan Building, Lexington, KY 40506-0225, United States.
Plants have evolved strategies to maintain photosynthesis and mitigate tissue-damaging high light. In some dioecious seed plants, these strategies are sexually dimorphic and are linked to spatial segregation of the sexes (SSS) along light gradients. In vascular tissue-free plants (bryophytes) with separate sexes, SSS is common, but how light gradients, sexual dimorphisms, and SSS correlate is not well understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants (Basel)
February 2025
Malopolska Centre of Biotechnology, Jagiellonian University, 30-387 Krakow, Poland.
The liverwort has emerged as a valuable model for studying fundamental biological processes and the evolutionary history of land plants. -mediated transformation is widely used for genetic modification of using spores, thalli, and gemmae. While spores offer high transformation efficiency, they result in diverse genetic backgrounds due to sexual reproduction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
July 2024
School of Plant Sciences and Food Security, Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997820, Israel.
The evolution of the land plant alternation of generations has been an open question for the past 150 years. Two hypotheses have dominated the discussion: the antithetic hypothesis, which posits that the diploid sporophyte generation arose de novo and gradually increased in complexity, and the homologous hypothesis, which holds that land plant ancestors had independently living sporophytes and haploid gametophytes of similar complexity. Changes in ploidy levels were unknown to early researchers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
September 2024
State Key Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093, China.
Germline fate determination is a critical event in sexual reproduction. Unlike animals, plants specify the germline by reprogramming somatic cells at the late stages of their development. However, the genetic basis of germline fate determination and how it evolved during the land plant evolution are still poorly understood.
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