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Testing mechanisms of compensatory fitness of dioecy in a cosexual world. 

Journal of Vegetation Science

Wang, Y., Mazer, S. J., Freckleton, R. P., Yuan, Z., Wang, X., Du, Y., ... & Hao, Z. 

2019

Journal of Vegetation Science

30(3)

413-426

All else being equal, populations of dioecious species with a 50:50 sex ratio have only half the effective reproductive population size of bisexual species of equal abundance. Consequently, there is a need to explain how dioecious and bisexual species coexist. Increased mean individual seed mass, fecundity, and population density have all been proposed as attributes of unisexual individuals or populations that may contribute to the persistence or resilience of dioecious species. To date, no studies have compared sympatric dioecious and cosexual species with respect to all three components of fitness. In this study, we sought evidence for these compensatory advantages (higher seed mass, greater seed production per unit basal area, and higher population density) in dioecious species.

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The Liana Ecology Project is supported by Marquette University and funded in part by the National Science Foundation.

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