- Sexual dimorphism (Plants),
- Grasses -- Reproduction,
- Salt marsh plants,
- Mycorrhizas,
- Symbiosis
Associations between mycorrhizal fungi and plants can influence intraspecific competition and shape plant population structure. While variation in plant genotypes is known to affect mycorrhizal colonization in crop systems, little is known about how genotypes affect colonization in natural plant populations or how plant sex might influence colonization with mycorrhizal fungi in plant species with dimorphic sexual systems. In this study, we analyzed mycorrhizal colonization in males and females of the wetland dioecious grass Distichlis spicata, which has spatially segregated sexes. Our results suggest that D. spicata males and females interact with mycorrhizal fungi differently. We discuss the implications for the role of this sex-specific symbiotic interaction in the maintenance of the within-population sex ratio bias of D. spicata.
This is the publisher's final PDF. Originally appeared in the American Journal of Botany, published by the American Botanical Society. Article can be found at http://www.amjbot.org/content/96/11/1967.full.