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1 January 2001 SEX AMONG THE FLOWERS: THE DISTRIBUTION OF PLANT MATING SYSTEMS
Donna W. Vogler, Susan Kalisz
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Abstract

Previous reviews of plant outcrossing rate survey data have agreed that predominant selfing and predominant outcrossing are alternative stable states of mating system evolution. We reanalyzed the most recent data and plot outcrossing rates as a continuous variable rather than as a class variable. Wind-pollinated species are indeed bimodal. However, the shape of the distributions for animal-pollinated species reveals that intermediate rates of outcrossing are common (49% of species fall between 20% and 80% outcrossing). Consequently, we suggest that mating system is best considered a continuous rather than a discrete character of plant populations.

Corresponding Editor: O. Savolainen

Donna W. Vogler and Susan Kalisz "SEX AMONG THE FLOWERS: THE DISTRIBUTION OF PLANT MATING SYSTEMS," Evolution 55(1), 202-204, (1 January 2001). https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2001)055[0202:SATFTD]2.0.CO;2
Received: 17 May 2000; Accepted: 7 August 2000; Published: 1 January 2001
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KEYWORDS
Intermediate outcrossing
mating systems
mixed mating
outcrossing rates
selfing rates
t-values
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