Everything about Dioecious totally explained
Monoicous organisms are defined as having both sperm-producing and egg-producing reproductive organs in the same individual. By contrast
dioicous organisms produce male and female reproductive organs on different individuals.
Etymology and history
The word
monoicous and the related forms
monoecious and
monocous are derived from the Greek roots
mono, (= single) and
oikos, (= house). Similarly,
dioicous and the forms
dioecious and
diocous are derived from the Greek
di (= twice or double) +
oikos, (= house). Historically, the terms "monoecious (dioecious)" and "monoicous (dioicous)" have been used interchangeably in
botany, but there's a tendency to restrict
monoecious and
dioecious only to
seed plants, referring to whether or not an individual
sporophyte plant bears one or both kinds of
gametophyte.
Monoicous and
dioicous refer to whether or not an individual gametophyte plant bears one or both kinds of
gametangia.
In
zoology, the preferred terminology has become
hermaphrodite, rather than "monoecious". An exception are lower animals, for example, the
phylum of
annelids (that covers
worms and
leeches): they may be monoecious (the same animal bears both
ova and
sperm) or dioecious.
Bryophyte sexuality
In
all land plants, the haploid gametophytes are the only structures that produce gametes, and thus sexuality is fundamentally the same in all groups. However, complications arise from differences in the timing of sex determination and differences in the relative development and importance of gametophytes and sporophytes in different plant groups.
Bryophytes have life-cycles that are generally
gametophyte-orientated; that is, the normal, dominant
autotrophic plant is the
haploid gametophyte. The sporophyte in bryophytes is dependent,
parasitic on the gametophyte, and is a reduced
diploid structure consisting only of a stalked
sporangium in season. As a result, in bryophytes sexuality is usually determined by the gametophyte. There are two basic categories of sexuality in bryophytes:
There are several specialized forms of the monoicous condition, each with its own terminology:
Autoicous bryophytes are monoicous, but with the antheridia and archegonia produced in separate clusters called inflorescences. A cladautoicous plant bears these inflorescences on separate branches.
Synoicous bryophytes produce their antheridia and archegonia together in the same inflorescence. This condition is also called androgynous.
Heteroicous bryophyte species may be either monoicous or sequentially dioicous depending on environmental conditions. This condition is also called polygamous or polyoicous. Other species grow exclusively with one type of sexuality.
Seed plant sexuality
In seed plants, gymnosperms and angiosperms, the sporophyte phase is dominant and the gametophytes are diminutive, strongly reduced in size and complexity, developing within sporophyte tissues and completely dependent on the sporophyte for nurture, totally reversing the situation in bryophytes. The sporophytes of seed plants therefore exert control over the sexuality of the gametophytes, which by contrast with bryophytes are always unisexual, never bisexual. In seed plants but not free-sporing pteridophytes or bryophytes a monoecious plant produces male and female gametophytes in the same sporophyte, in contrast to dioecious plants, in which a single plant may have only either male or female organs. See Sexual reproduction of plants.
Monoecious - having unisexual flowers, conifer cones, or functionally equivalent structures of both sexes appearing on the same plant;
Dioecious - having unisexual flowers, conifer cones, or functionally equivalent structures occurring on different individuals;
Because many dioecious conifers show a tendency towards monoecy (that is, a female plant may sometimes produce small numbers of male cones or vice versa), these species are termed subdioecious.
Role in survival
There are both advantages and disadvantages in being monoicous or dioicous. Monoicous organisms benefit because they're almost always capable of reproducing, since there's no need to find a partner of another gender. However, dependence on inbreeding increases homozygosity and reduces genetic variability in populations, which become less well adapted to survive in changing or spatially patchy environments.
Dioicous organisms, on the other hand, have the benefit of exchanging genes with other members of the species, increasing heterozygosity and variability, and thus promoting natural selection from among a wider range of desirable traits and evolution. However, they're at a disadvantage in areas of low population, where there's a lower probability of encountering a breeding partner of the opposite gender. When only one gender of a species remains, it may be considered extinct and the only possible ways to save the species is through cloning or interbreeding with a closely related species, producing a hybrid. If populations reach critically low numbers ("Bottleneck"), inbreeding may increase due to the reduced pool of possible mates, reducing the number of available allelles for evolution, and in certain species this may result in an inbreeding depression effect, where reproduction is reduced by infertility, incompatibility, or increased numbers of developmental abnormalities.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Dioecious'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://monoicous.totallyexplained.com">Monoicous Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |