A sexual system is a distribution of male and female functions across organisms in a species.[1][2] The terms reproductive system and mating system have also been used as synonyms.[3]
Flowering plants may have dimorphic or monomorphic sexual systems. In monomorphic sexual systems, a combination of hermaphrodite, male, and/or femaleflowers may be present on the same plant. Monomorphic sexual systems include monoecy, gynomonoecy, andromonoecy, and trimonoecy. In dimorphic sexual systems, individual plants within a species only produce one sort of flower, either hermaphrodite or male, or female. Dimorphic sexual systems include dioecy, gynodioecy, androdioecy, and trioecy.[6]
Male (a.k.a. staminate) flowers have a stamen but no pistil and produce only male gametes. Female (a.k.a. pistillate) flowers only have a pistil. Hermaphrodite (a.k.a. perfect, or bisexual) flowers have both a stamen and pistil. The sex of a single flower may differ from the sex of the whole organism: for example, a plant may have both staminate and pistillate flowers, making the plant as a whole a hermaphrodite. Hence although all monomorphic plants are hermaphrodites, different combinations of flower types (staminate, pistillate, or perfect) produces distinct monomorphic sexual systems.[7]
rare sexual system in angiosperms, in which a plant has both male and hermaphroditic flowers.[12] It has been a subject of interest regarding the mechanism of sex expression.[13]
an individual plant produces either exclusively male or exclusively female flowers at different points in time.[14] It is thought the temporal separation of producing male and female flowers occurs to prevent self-fertilization,[15] however this is debatable as dichogamy occurs in similar frequency among species which are self-compatible and self-incompatible.[16]
a species has distinct individual organisms that are either male or female, i.e., they produce only male or only female gametes, either directly (in animals) or indirectly (in plants).[19]
The term "gonochorism" is usually applied to animals while "dioecy" is applied to plants.[20] Gonochorism is the most common sexual system in animals, occurring in 95% of animal species.[21]
defined as the presence of both female and hermaphrodite flowers on the same individual of a plant species.[22] It is prevalent in Asteraceae but is poorly understood.[23]
Gynodioecy-Gynomonoecy
a sexual system for plants when female, hermaphrodite, and gynomonoecious plants coexist in the same population.[24]: 360
a sexual system in which male and female flowers are present on the same plant. It is common in angiosperms,[25] and occurs in 10% of all plant species.[26][dubious – discuss]
individuals start their adult lives as one sex, and change to the other sex at a later age.[27]
Sequential monoecy
a confusing sexual system,[28] in which the combination of male, female, and hermaphrodite flowers presented changes over time.[29] For example, some conifers produce exclusively either male or female cones when young, then both when older.[30] Sequential monoecy can be difficult to differentiate from dioecy.[31] Several alternative terms may be used in reference to sexual systems involving temporal changes to sex presentation of a plant species (e.g. dichogamy, sequential hermaphroditism, sex change, paradioecy, diphasy).[32]
an individual can produce both gamete types in the same breeding season.[33] Simultaneous hermaphroditism is one of the most common sexual systems in animals (though far less common than gonochorism) and is one of the most stable.[34]
Synoecy
all individuals in a population of flowering plants bear solely hermaphrodite flowers.[27]
males, females, and hermaphrodites exist in the same population.[8] It is present in both plants and animals but is always extremely rare.[35] Trioecy occurs in about 3.6% of flowering plants.[36] Trioecy may infrequently be referred to as tridioecy.[37]
^Goldberg EE, Otto SP, Vamosi JC, Mayrose I, Sabath N, Ming R, Ashman TL (April 2017). "Macroevolutionary synthesis of flowering plant sexual systems". Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution. 71 (4): 898–912. doi:10.1111/evo.13181. PMID28085192. S2CID19562183.
^Greenwood, Paul J.; Greenwood, Greenwood, Paul John; Harvey, Paul H.; Harvey, Reader in Biology Department of Zoology Paul H.; Slatkin, Montgomery; Slatkin, Professor of Integrative Biology Montgomery; Cambridge, University of (1985-07-11). Evolution: Essays in Honour of John Maynard Smith. CUP Archive. p. 240. ISBN978-0-521-25734-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)