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Climate change is associated with increased allocation to potential outcrossing in a common mixed mating species.

Matthew W AustinPiper O ColeKenneth M OlsenGholam Hosein Yusefi
Published in: American journal of botany (2022)
Our results suggest that V. sororia has responded to lower temperatures and greater water availability by shifting reproductive strategy allocation away from selfing and toward potential outcrossing. This provides the first long-term study of how climate change may affect relative allocation to potential outcrossing in species with mixed mating systems. By revealing that CL flowering is associated with low water availability and high temperature, our results suggest the production of obligately selfing flowers is favored in water limited environments.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • human health
  • high temperature
  • genetic diversity
  • arabidopsis thaliana