Global biogeography of mating system variation in seed plants.

Abstract:

:Latitudinal gradients in biotic interactions have been suggested as causes of global patterns of biodiversity and phenotypic variation. Plant biologists have long speculated that outcrossing mating systems are more common at low than high latitudes owing to a greater predictability of plant-pollinator interactions in the tropics; however, these ideas have not previously been tested. Here, we present the first global biogeographic analysis of plant mating systems based on 624 published studies from 492 taxa. We found a weak decline in outcrossing rate towards higher latitudes and among some biomes, but no biogeographic patterns in the frequency of self-incompatibility. Incorporating life history and growth form into biogeographic analyses reduced or eliminated the importance of latitude and biome in predicting outcrossing or self-incompatibility. Our results suggest that biogeographic patterns in mating system are more likely a reflection of the frequency of life forms across latitudes rather than the strength of plant-pollinator interactions.

journal_name

Ecol Lett

journal_title

Ecology letters

authors

Moeller DA,Briscoe Runquist RD,Moe AM,Geber MA,Goodwillie C,Cheptou PO,Eckert CG,Elle E,Johnston MO,Kalisz S,Ree RH,Sargent RD,Vallejo-Marin M,Winn AA

doi

10.1111/ele.12738

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2017-03-01 00:00:00

pages

375-384

issue

3

eissn

1461-023X

issn

1461-0248

journal_volume

20

pub_type

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