Dictionary Definition
monoecious adj : having male and female
reproductive organs in the same plant or animal [syn: monecious, monoicous] [ant: dioecious]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
monoecious- Having the male and female reproductive organs on different parts of the same plant rather than on separate plants (of the same species)
- hermaphroditic
Antonyms
Extensive Definition
Plant sexuality covers the wide variety of
sexual
reproduction systems found across the plant kingdom. This article
describes morphological
aspects of sexual reproduction of plants.
Among all living organisms, Flowers which are
the reproductive structures of angiosperms,
are the most varied physically and show the greatest diversity in
methods of reproduction of all biological systems. Carolus
Linnaeus (1735 and 1753) proposed a system of classification of
flowering plants based on plant structures, since plants employ
many different morphological adaptations involving sexual
reproduction, flowers played an important role in that
classification system. Later on Christian
Konrad Sprengel (1793) studied plant sexuality and called it
the "revealed secret of nature" and for the first time it was
understood that the pollination process involved
both biotic and abiotic interactions (Charles
Darwin's theories of natural selection utilized this work
to promote his idea of evolution). Plants that are not flowering
plants (green alga,
mosses, liverworts, hornworts, ferns, and gymnosperms) also have
complex interplays between morphological adaptation and
environmental factors in their sexual reproduction. The breeding
system, or how the sperm from one plant fertilizes the ovals of
another, is the single most important determinant of the mating
structure of nonclonal plant populations. The mating structure or
morphology of the flower parts and their arrangement on the plant
in turn controls the amount and distribution of genetic variation,
a central element in the evolutionary process.
History
Unlike animals, plants are immobile and cannot
seek out sexual partners for reproduction. The first plants used
abiotic means to transport sperm for reproduction, utilizing
water and wind. The first plants were aquatic
and released sperm freely into the water to be carried by the
currents. As plants moved onto land they used a thin film of water
or water droplets like liverworts and ferns, in which mobile sperm
swam from the male reproduction organs to the female organs. As
plants became more complex and developed vascular systems enabling
them to grow taller, they used alternation
of generations like in ferns or the wind to move spores. In the
Paleozoic
era progymnosperms
reproduced by using spores dispersed on the wind, 350 million years
ago the seed plants evolved, including seed ferns,
conifers and cordaites all were gymnosperms. Pollen grains,
the male gametophyte, developed for
protection of the sperm during the process of transfer from male to
female parts. It is believed that insects feed on the pollen and
plants evolved to use insects to actively carry pollen
from one plant to the next. Seed producing plants, which include
the angiosperms and the gymnosperms, have hetromorphic alternation
of generations with large sporophytes containing much reduced
gametophytes. Angiosperms have distinctive reproductive organs
called flowers with carpels and the gametophyte is
greatly reduced down to a female embryo sac with as few as eight
cells and the male gametophyte develop from the pollen grains. The
sperm of seed plants are non motile except for two older groups of
plants the Cycadophyta and
the Ginkgophyta
which have flagellated sperm.
Terminology
The flowers of angiosperms are determinate shoots
that have sporophylls. The parts of
flowers are named by scientists and show great variation in shape,
these flower parts include sepals, petals, stamens and carpels. As
a group the sepals form the calyx and as a group the petals form
the corolla, together the corolla and the calyx is called the
perianth. The stamens collectively are called the androecuim and
the carpels collectively are called the gynoecium.
The complexity of the systems and devices used by
plants to achieve sexual reproduction has resulted in botanists and
evolutionary biologists using numerous terms to describe physical
structures and functional strategies. Dellaporta and Calderon-Urrea
(1993) list and define a variety of terms used to describe the
modes of sexuality at different levels in flowering plants. This
list is reproduced here , generalized to fit more than just plants
that have flowers, and
expanded to include other terms and more complete
definitions.
Another large group of flowering plants is the
Asteraceae or sunflower family with close to 22,000 species, which
also have highly modified inflorescences that are flowers collected
together in heads composed of a composite of individual flowers
called florets. Heads with florets of one sex, when the flowers are
pistillate or functionally staminate, or made up of all bisexual
florets, are called homogamous and can include discoid and
liguliflorous type heads. Some radiate heads may be homogamous too.
Plants with heads that have florets of two or more sexual forms are
called heterogamous and include radiate and disciform head forms,
though some radiate heads may be heterogamous too.
Individual plant sexuality
Many plants have complete flowers that have both
male and female parts, others only have male or female parts and
still other plants have flowers on the same plant that are a mix of
male and female flowers. Some plants even have mixes that include
all three types of flowers, where some flowers are only male, some
are only female and some are both male and female. A distinction
needs to be made between arrangements of sexual parts and the
expression of sexuality in single plants verses the species. Some
plants also undergo what is called Sex-switching, like Arisaema
triphyllum which express sexual differences at different stages
of growth. In some arums smaller plants produce all or mostly male
flowers and as plants grow larger over the years the male flowers
are replaced by more female flowers on the same plant. Arisaema
triphyllum thus covers a multitude of sexual conditions in its life
time; from nonsexual juvenile plants to young plants that are all
male, as plants grow larger they have a mix of both male and female
flowers, to large plants that have mostly female flowers. Other
species have plants that produce more male flowers early in the
year and as plants bloom later in the growing season they produce
more female flowers. In plants like Thalictrum
dioicum all the plants in the species are ether male or
female.
Specific terms are used to describe the sexual
expression of individual plants within a population.
- Androecious - plants producing male flowers only, produce pollen but no seeds, the male plants of a Dioecious species.
- Dioecious - having unisexual reproductive units with male and female plants. (flowers, conifer cones, or functionally equivalent structures) occurring on different individuals; from Greek for "two households". Individual plants are not called dioecious: they are either gynoecious (female plants) or androecious (male plants).
- Gynoecious - plants producing female flowers only, produces seeds but no pollen, the female of a Dioecious species. In some plant species or populations all individuals are gynoecious with non sexual reproduction used to produce the next generation.
- Hermaphrodite - A plant that has only bisexual reproductive units (flowers, conifer cones, or functionally equivalent structures). In angiosperm terminology a synonym is monoclinous from the Greek "one bed".
- Monoecious - having separate male and female reproductive units (flowers, conifer cones, or functionally equivalent structures) on the same plant; from Greek for "one household". Individuals bearing separate flowers of both sexes at the same time are called simultaneously or synchronously monoecious. Individuals that bear flowers of one sex at one time are called consecutively monoecious; Plants may first have single sexed flowers and then later have flowers of the other sex. Protoandrous describes individuals that function first as males and then change to females; protogynous describes individuals that function first as females and then change to males.
- Subdioecious, a tendency in some dioecious species to produce
monoecious plants. The population produces normally male or female
plants but some are hermaphroditic, with female plants producing
some male or hermaphroditic flowers or vise versa. The condition is
thought to represent a transition between hermaphroditism and
dioecy. .
- Gynomonoecious - has both hermaphrodite and female structures.
- Andromonoecious - has both hermaphrodite and male structures.
- Subandroecious - plant has mostly male flowers, with a few female or hermaphrodite flowers.
- Subgynoecious - plant has mostly female flowers, with a few male or hermaphrodite flowers.
- Trimonoecious (polygamous) - male, female, and hermaphrodite structures all appear on the same plant.
- Diclinous ("two beds"), an angiosperm term, includes all species with unisexual flowers, although particularly those with only unisexual flowers, i.e. the monoecious and dioecious species.
Plant population
Most often plants show uniform strategies across
the species or in populations in their sexual expression and
specific terms are used to describe the sexual expression of the
species or population.
- Hermaphrodite - only hermaphrodite plants with flowers that have both male and female parts.
- Monoecious - only monoecious plants, that is plants have separate male and female flowers on the same plant. A plant species where the male and female organs are found in different flowers on the same plant, often plants are wind pollinated like some trees and grasses like corn.
- Dioecious - only dioecious plants, all plants are either female or male.
- Gynodioecious - both female and hermaphrodite plants present. In some plants, strictly female plants are produced by the degeneration of the tapetum, a shell-like structure in the anther of a flower where the pollen cells form, producing male sterility.
- Gynoecy - plants are all females in a population, often regulated by environmental factors like temperature, photo period or water availability.
- Androdioecious - both male and hermaphrodite plants present.
- Polygamous - when there is a mix of hermaphrodite and unisexual plants in the natural population.
- Subdioecious - population of unisexual (dioecious) plants, with monoecious individuals too.
- Trioecious - sometimes used in place of subdioecious when male, female, and hermaphrodite plants are more equally mixed with in the same population.
About 11% of all angiosperms are strictly
dioecious or monoecious, lntermediate forms of sexual dimorphism,
including gynodioecy and androdioecy, represent 7% of
the species examined of a survey of 120,000 plant species. In the
same survey, 10% of the species contain both unisexual and bisexual
flowers.
The majority of plant species use allogamy - also
called cross-pollination, as a means of breeding. Many plants are
self fertile and the male parts can pollinate the female parts of
the same flower and/or same plant. Some plants use a method known
as
self-incompatibility to promote outcrossing. In these plants,
the male organs cannot fertilize the female parts of the same
plant, other plants produce male and female flowers at different
times to promote outcrossing. Some plants have bisexual flowers but
the pollen is produced before the stigma of the same flower is
receptive of pollen, this promotes out crossing by greatly limiting
self pollination and these types of flowers are called
protandrous.
Flower morphology
A species such as the ash tree (Fraxinus excelsior L.), demonstrates the possible range of variation in morphology and functionality exhibited by flowers with respect to gender. Flowers of the ash are wind-pollinated and lack petals and sepals. Structurally, the flowers may be either male or female, or even hermaphroditic, consisting of two anthers and an ovary. A male flower can be morphologically male or hermaphroditic, with anthers and a rudimentary gynoecium. Ash flowers can also be morphologically female, or hermaphroditic and functionally female.Evolution
Angiosperms
It is thought that flowering plants evolved from a common hermaphrodite ancestor, and that dioecy evolved from hermaphroditism. Hermaphroditism is very common in flowering plants; over 85% are hermaphroditic, whereas only about 6-7% are dioecious and 5-6% are monoecious .A fair degree of correlation (though far from
complete) exists between dioecy/sub-dioecy and plants that have
seeds dispersed by birds
(both nuts and
berries). It is
hypothesized that the concentration of fruit in half of the plants
increases dispersal efficiency; female plants can produce a higher
density of fruit as they do not expend resources on pollen
production, and the dispersal agents (birds) need not waste time
looking for fruit on male plants. Other correlations with dioecy
include: tropical distribution, woody growth form, perenniality,
fleshy fruits, and small, green flowers.
Plant
growth regulators can be used to alter flower and plant
sexuality, in cucumbers ethephon is used to delay
staminate flowering and transforms monoecious lines into
all-pistillate or female lines. Gibberellins
also increase maleness in cucumbers. Cytokinins have
been used in grapes that have undeveloped pistils to produce
functional female organs and seed formation.
References
- Binggeli, P., & Power, J. (1999). Gender variation in ash (Fraxinus excelsior L.)
- Darwin, C. (1877). The Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species.
- Dellaporta, S.L. and A. Calderon-Urrea. (1993). Sex determination in flowering plants. The Plant Cell 5: 1241-1251.
- Linnaeus, C. (1735). Systema Naturae.
- Renner, S.S., & Ricklefs, R.E. (1995). Dioecy and its correlates in the flowering plants. American Journal of Botany 82: 596-606.
External links
monoecious in Catalan: Monoècia
monoecious in Danish: Tvebo
monoecious in German: Diözie
monoecious in Spanish: Sexualidad vegetal
monoecious in French: Dioécie
monoecious in Dutch: Tweeslachtig
monoecious in Portuguese: Dióico
monoecious in Russian: Разделение полов у
растений
monoecious in Swedish:
Tvåbyggare