International audienceSperm competition theory predicts that males should produce many, similar sperm. However, in some species of animals and plants, males exhibit a heteromorphism that results in the production of at least two different types of sperm or pollen grains. In animals, sperm heteromorphism typically corresponds to the production of one fertile morph and one (or more) sterile morph(s), whereas in plants two or more pollen morphs (one of which can be either sterile or fertile) are produced in all flowers but sometimes in different anthers. Heteromorphism has arisen independently several times across phyla and at different phylogenetic levels. Here, we compare and contrast sperm and pollen heteromorphism and discuss the evolution...
Different strategies to reduce selfing and promote outcrossing have evolved in hermaphroditic flower...
In flowering plants, the onset and duration of female receptivity vary among species. In several spe...
Mate choice in plants is poorly understood, in particular its indirect genetic benefits, but also th...
International audienceSperm competition theory predicts that males should produce many, similar sper...
Sperm competition and cryptic female choice profoundly affect sperm morphology, producing diversity ...
Although sexual selection and sexual conflict are important evolutionary forces in animals, their si...
International audienceIn flowering plants, the haploid phase is reduced to the pollen grain and embr...
BackgroundThe remarkable diversity of mating patterns and sexual systems in flowering plants has fas...
Recent developments in the field of genetic divergence and speciation focus more on diversifying pro...
The incidence of sexual selection in plants is today acknowledged, however, just as in animals, evol...
Mating with more than one pollen donor, or polyandry, is common in land plants. In flowering plants,...
While sexual selection and sexual conflict are important evolutionary forces in animals, their signi...
Fertilization in angiosperms involves the germination of pollen on the stigma, followed by the extru...
According to the theory of sexual selection, traits can evolve because they confer a mating advantag...
In flowering plants, the onset and duration of female receptivity vary among species. In several spe...
Different strategies to reduce selfing and promote outcrossing have evolved in hermaphroditic flower...
In flowering plants, the onset and duration of female receptivity vary among species. In several spe...
Mate choice in plants is poorly understood, in particular its indirect genetic benefits, but also th...
International audienceSperm competition theory predicts that males should produce many, similar sper...
Sperm competition and cryptic female choice profoundly affect sperm morphology, producing diversity ...
Although sexual selection and sexual conflict are important evolutionary forces in animals, their si...
International audienceIn flowering plants, the haploid phase is reduced to the pollen grain and embr...
BackgroundThe remarkable diversity of mating patterns and sexual systems in flowering plants has fas...
Recent developments in the field of genetic divergence and speciation focus more on diversifying pro...
The incidence of sexual selection in plants is today acknowledged, however, just as in animals, evol...
Mating with more than one pollen donor, or polyandry, is common in land plants. In flowering plants,...
While sexual selection and sexual conflict are important evolutionary forces in animals, their signi...
Fertilization in angiosperms involves the germination of pollen on the stigma, followed by the extru...
According to the theory of sexual selection, traits can evolve because they confer a mating advantag...
In flowering plants, the onset and duration of female receptivity vary among species. In several spe...
Different strategies to reduce selfing and promote outcrossing have evolved in hermaphroditic flower...
In flowering plants, the onset and duration of female receptivity vary among species. In several spe...
Mate choice in plants is poorly understood, in particular its indirect genetic benefits, but also th...