Abstract
Gender expression and sporophyte frequency of Frullania tamarisci were compared between epiphytic woodland and exposed coastal colonies in an Atlantic region of western Britain. Corticolous colonies exhibited very high sporophyte frequency in mixed-sex colonies. Samples from well-grown epiphytic patches commonly had intimate mixtures of highly fertile female and male shoot networks, and fertilisation reduced gynoecia number. In marked contrast, colonies in exposed coastal habitats were found to be sub-fertile or non sex-expressing and sporophytes were rare. There was a distinct female bias among colonies on the coast where spatial segregation of the sexes and male scarcity appear to limit sporophyte frequency. It is suggested that the close association of males and sporophytic females in epiphytic colonies may be influenced by within-colony sporophyte frequency.