Andromonoecy
Andromonoecy is a breeding system of plant species in which male and hermaphrodite flowers are on the same plant. It is a monomorphic sexual system comparable with monoecy, gynomonoecy and trimonoecy. Andromonoecy is frequent among genera with zygomorphic flowers, however it is overall rare and occurs in less than 2% of plant species. Nonetheless the breeding system has gained interest among biologists in the study of sex expression.
Etymology
The word andromonoecious is a combination of andr- and monoecious and was first used in 1877.Prevalence
Andromonoecy is uncommon and has been estimated to occur in less than 2% of plant species. In angiosperms, it occurs in 1.7% of angiosperms making up around 4000 species in 33 families. It is common in the grass subfamily Panicoideae.Andromonoecious species
- Cucumis melo subsp
- Cucumis melo
- Chaerophyllum bulbosum
- Erophaca baetica
- ''Silene tibetica''
''[Solanum]''
- Solanum agnewiorum
- Solanum aureitomentosum
- Solanum campylacanthum
- Solanum carolinense
- Solanum cerasiferum
- Solanum incanum
- Solanum insanum
- Solanum lichtensteinii
- Solanum linnaeanum
- Solanum melongena
- Solanum rigidum
- Solanum umtuma
- ''Solanum usambarsense''
Evolution
Andromonoecy is also considered an evolutionary step towards dioecy. If female flowers are better at producing seeds than hermaphroditic ones, andromonoecy could evolve towards monoecy.