TY - JOUR T1 - Multiple factors influence population sex ratios in the Mojave Desert moss <em>Syntrichia caninervis</em> JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/075861 SP - 075861 AU - Jenna T. Baughman AU - Adam C. Payton AU - Amber E. Paasch AU - Kirsten M. Fisher AU - Stuart F. McDaniel Y1 - 2017/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/02/07/075861.abstract N2 - Premise of research: Natural populations of many mosses appear highly female-biased based on the presence of reproductive structures. This bias could be caused by increased male mortality, lower male growth rate, or a higher threshold for achieving sexual maturity in males. Here we test these hypotheses using samples from two populations of the Mojave Desert moss Syntrichia caninervis.Methods: We used double digest restriction-site associated DNA (RAD) sequencing to identify candidate sex-associated loci in a panel of sex-expressing plants. Next, we used putative sex-associated markers to identify the sex of individuals without sex structures.Key results: We found an 18:1 phenotypic female: male sex ratio in the higher elevation site (Wrightwood), and no sex expression at the low elevation site (Phelan). In contrast, based on genetic data we found a 2:1 female bias in the Wrightwood site and only females in the Phelan site. The area occupied by male and female genets was indistinguishable.Conclusions: These data suggest that both differential mortality and sexual dimorphism in thresholds for sex expression likely contribute to population genetic and phenotypic sex ratio biases, and that phenotypic sex expression alone fails to capture the extent of actual sex ratio bias present in natural populations of S. caninervis. ER -