Homogamy (biology)

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The heterogamous sunflower head is made up of two types of florets: the ray florets near the edge are bilaterally symmetrical with one long petal, and the disk florets in the centre are radially symmetrical with five small petals.
The homogamous chicory flower head is made up of bilaterally symmetrical ray florets, each with one long petal.

Homogamy is used in biology in four separate senses:

  • Inbreeding can be referred to as homogamy.[1]
  • Homogamy refers to the maturation of male and female reproductive organs (of plants) at the same time, which is also known as simultaneous or synchronous hermaphrodism and is the antonym of dichogamy. Many flowers appear to be homogamous but some of these may not be strictly functionally homogamous, because for various reasons male and female reproduction do not completely overlap.[2]
  • In the daisy family, the flower heads are made up of many small flowers called florets, and are either homogamous or heterogamous. Heterogamous heads are made up of two types of florets, ray florets near the edge and disk florets in the center. Homogamous heads are made up of just one type of floret, either all ray florets or all disk florets.
  • Homogamy can be used as a form of choosing a mate based on characteristics that are wanted in a sexual partner.[3]

As opposed to outcrossing or outbreeding, inbreeding is the process by which organisms with common descent come together to mate and eventually procreate.[4] An archetype of inbreeding is self-pollination. When a plant has both anthers and a stigma, the process of inbreeding can occur. Another word for this self-fertilization is autogamy, which is when an anther releases pollen to attach to the stigma on the same plant. Self-pollination is promoted by homogamy. Homogamy is when the anthers and the stigma of a flower are being matured at the same time.[5] The action of self-pollination guides the plant to homozygosity, causing a specific gene to be received from each of the parents leading to the possession of two exact formats of that gene.[6]

Assortative mating

Evolutionary aspect

References

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