“…Secondly, we found a variable proportion of bisexual flowers on some predominantly male individuals in both ex situ and in situ populations. Sexual instability is a common phenomenon in dioecious plant species, and many exogenous, environmental and demographic factors are known to affect sex ratios, including plant hormones (Durand and Durand, 1991;Papadopoulou and Grumet, 2005), non-methylable nucleotide analogues (Janousek et al, 1996), temperature (Manzano et al, 2014), pathogens (Scutt et al, 1997), timing of seed set (Freeman et al, 1994) and population structure (Stehlik et al, 2008). Some of these factors strongly suggest the involvement of epigenetic mechanisms operating in sex determination, and sexual instability in A. trichopoda may therefore involve such factors, operating either at, or downstream of, sex-determining loci.…”