The range of environmental sex determination and sex changes throughout
plant taxa from bryophytes and
pteridophytes to spermatophytes is reviewed. Lability in sex expression
occurs in many plant taxa but only
in homosporous pteridophytes is labile sex the rule. Among angiosperms,
labile
sex appears to be more
common among dioecious and monoecious plants than among hermaphrodites.
However, hermaphrodites
can control allocation to male and female functions by varying the relative
emphasis on pollen and ovules.
A majority of plants with labile sex expression are perennials, which
indicates that flexibility in sex is more
important for species with long life cycles. Environmental stress, caused
by
less-than-optimal light, nutrition,
weather or water conditions, often favours maleness. The extreme lability
in
the sex expression of
homosporous pteridophytes is suggested to be related primarily to the mating
systems.