Dioecy in a wind-pollinated herb explained by disruptive selection on sex allocation

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Summary The evolution of dioecy from hermaphroditism is widely thought to be a response to disruptive selection favouring males and females, driven by advantages of inbreeding avoidance, sexual specialization, or both. It has hitherto been difficult to uncouple the importance of these two hypotheses. We use phenotypes produced by experimental evolution to test the inbreeding avoidance hypothesis in populations from which sexual specialization can be effectively ruled out. We estimate the selfing rate and the shape of fitness gain curves under scenarios with and without inbreeding depression in experimental populations of wind-pollinated Mercurialis annua with high variation in sex allocation. We confirm a phenotypic trade-off between male and female allocation in M. annua. Individual selfing rates increased with pollen production. This dependence gave rise to strong disruptive selection on sex allocation due to its interaction with the mating system under the scenario of high inbreeding depression, especially for plants of medium and large sizes. Taken together, we demonstrate that inbreeding avoidance on its own can lead to disruptive selection on sex allocation, favouring the selection and maintenance of dioecy under wind pollination without associated benefits of sexual specialization. Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest. Footnotes This revision of the manuscript has been revised to update the presentation of the study.

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last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00