WELCOME

 

Plant Reproductive Ecology

 

There are few greater obstacles to sexual reproduction than the rarity or absence of one sex. Limited or no sexual reproduction can result in a species inability to adapt to a changing environment, leading to population declines and eventually species extinction. Yet among plants, specifically bryophytes, rarity or absence of one sex occur frequently. Although intriguing, the underlying causes of these patterns have infrequently been investigated. Our research program focuses on elucidating the factors resulting in an entire species or population being dominated by one sex. Such factors include variation in offspring sex ratios and sex differences in clonal expansion that are a function of differential growth, asexual reproduction, colonization and survival as well as sex differences in sex expression.
 

To study the causes and consequences of sex ratio variation we use an unusually broad array of techniques, including molecular-genetic analysis, physiological methods, greenhouse and growth chamber experiments, field experiments and monitoring, and mathematical modeling.   ---- D. Nicholas McLetchie

Lab News  (updated Feb 2022)

 

New publication:

Sex Differences in Desiccation Tolerance Varies by Colony in the Mesic Liverwort Plagiochila porelloides

 

New PhD Student 2021 -  Hansika Herath

 

 

 

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Designed by Panny
CONTACT
D. Nicholas McLetchie Ph.D., Phone: 859-257-6786, Fax: 859-257-1717,  Email: mclet@uky.edu
Department of Biology, 101 Morgan Building, University of Kentucky, Lexington KY 40502-0225

Nicholas 

McLetchie

Lab