News / Science News

    Striped maple trees often change mating types, with females more likely to die

    More than 90 percent of flowering plant species combine male and female characteristics in one plant. In the less than 10 percent where female and male flowers exist on separate plants, they typically remain female or male throughout their lifetimes. But it isn’t always that simple.



    Striped maple trees often change mating types, with females more likely to die. Photo: Jennifer Blake-Mahmud


    Researchers found that striped maple trees can switch from male to female or female to male from year to year. A tree may be male one year and female the next, and while male trees continue to grow, female trees are more likely to die.

    The study found that 54 percent of striped maple trees changed mating type over a four-year period, with some switching multiple times. Male trees usually outnumbered female trees by more than three to one.

    From the time the study started in 2014, 75 percent of trees that died were female. Since only female trees can make seeds, changes in the relative numbers of males and females might lead to reduced populations.

    "We found that, contrary to previous scientific knowledge, unhealthy trees have a higher likelihood of being female, and the size of the tree doesn't seem to influence what sex a tree is," said lead author Jennifer Blake-Mahmud, a botanist at Princeton University.

    Understory trees such as striped maples grow beneath the forest canopy and may become unhealthy for many reasons: insects chew on them, deer use them for antler rubs, large trees fall on them during storms, and drought can affect them.

    Over longer periods, these stressful conditions may result in an increase in numbers of females compared with males -- more females likely means more seeds and more seedlings to fill the gap. At first this might seem like a good thing. But since the female death rate is much higher than the male death rate, the number of trees may still decline over the long run. (National Science Foundation)

    JUNE 6, 2019



    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

    Individuals with group A blood suffer more than others from E. Coli infections.
    The April 25, 2015, magnitude 7.8 Gorkha earthquake in Nepal created waves of energy that penetrated into Earth's upper atmosphere in the vicinity of Nepal, disturbing the distribution of electrons in the ionosphere.
    Researchers created a new type of battery—made of paper and fueled by bacteria.
    More than 300 animal species face different degrees of threat in Bahia state. The State Environment Secretariat has published a list of 331 species of amphibians, birds, mammals, reptiles, continental invertebrates, fish, marine invertebrates, and the so-called “social interest” species—those exploited by traditional communities for sustainable use or subsistence.
    The human genome sequence, published in 2003, has helped researchers identify countless genes involved in health and disease. But genes tell only part of a biological story. Many other types of DNA sequences also have biological function. These regions control gene activity and affect DNA structure, dynamics, and replication. Chromatin, the complex of DNA and protein that forms chromosomes, also affects how genes are expressed (turned on and off).
    By analysing the composition of sounds in a forest — called a soundscape — scientists can make cost-effective and reliable assessment of the forest, according to a new study conducted in Papua New Guinea.

    © 1991-2023 The Titi Tudorancea Bulletin | Titi Tudorancea® is a Registered Trademark | Terms of use and privacy policy
    Contact