Sexual Selection

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Sexual Selection • Variance in reproductive success • Intrasexual selection • Intersexual (epigamic) selection – Direct benefits – Indirect benefits • Fisher runaway process • Good genes

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Sexual Selection. Variance in reproductive success Intrasexual selection Intersexual (epigamic) selection Direct benefits Indirect benefits Fisher runaway process Good genes. Why are there ornaments?. Sexual selection history. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Sexual Selection

Page 1: Sexual Selection

Sexual Selection

• Variance in reproductive success

• Intrasexual selection

• Intersexual (epigamic) selection– Direct benefits– Indirect benefits

• Fisher runaway process

• Good genes

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Why are there ornaments?

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Sexual selection history

• 1871 - Darwin published “Sexual selection and the Descent of Man”

• 1930 - RA Fisher “Theory of Natural Selection” - proposed runaway selection

• 1948 - Bateman’s experiment

• 1972 - Trivers “Sexual selection and parental investment”

• 1981 - Lande “Speciation and sexual selection”

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Bateman’s ExperimentMethods

3 males + 3 femalesper vial. Each fly hada unique dominant markerwhich allowed him toidentify the parent ofall offspring

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Conclusions from Bateman’s experiment

• Males usually have higher potential reproductive success than females because egg production limits reproductive rate

• Males show greater variation in reproductive success than females

• Therefore, traits which influence male reproductive success experience selection

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In mammals, VLRSmale is usually > VLRSfemale

Elephant seals Kipsigis

Human maxima: male paternity: female maternity:

888 69

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Intrasexual selection: one sex (typically males) competes for access to and fertilization of the other

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Sexual dimorphism reflects the intensity of selection on males

Elephantseal

Harborseal

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Why are females choosy?

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Intersexual (epigamic) selection: female choice

• Choice provides direct benefits to female– find fertile or compatible mate– improve immediate survival or fecundity

• Choice provides indirect (genetic) benefits– “Fisher process”

• choosy daughters produce ornamented sons

– “good genes”• male ornament indicates offspring viability

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Direct benefits: Females choose resources

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Pied flycatcher females prefer dominant males

Dark males providemore food to nestlingswhen mate is removedthan dull males

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When males only provide sperm

• Females should select for “indirect” benefits, i.e. genetic characteristics that their sons and daughters will inherit

• Genes that influence male attractiveness produce “sexy sons” and lead to the Fisher process

• Genes that influence offspring viability are referred to as “good genes”

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Hens prefer sperm from dominant males

Pizzari, T. and T.R. Birkhead 2000 Female feral fowl eject spermof subdominant males. Nature 405:787-789.

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Fisher’s Runaway process

• If females exhibit preference for a male trait

• And selection does not act on females

• Then their sons and daughters will carry genes for both the preference and the trait

• This creates a genetic correlation between the preference and trait

• And leads to geometric increase until further increase in the male trait is opposed by natural selection

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Lande’s model of Fisher’s runaway

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Female preference exhibits a genetic correlation with male trait in sticklebacks

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Natural selection opposes sexual selection

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Sexual and natural selection on barn swallow tails

Males withlonger tailspair quicker

and fledgemore chicks

but growshorter tailsthe next year

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Arbitrary traits in zebra finch or sensory bias?

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Good genes models• Require a mechanism for maintaining

heritable variation in offspring viability– Recurrent deleterious mutations– Parasite-host coevolution maintains parasite

resistance

• Handicap models refer to male traits that can only be displayed by males in good condition. These can be “honest” indicators of male condition

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Good genes models

For continued evolution of male trait and female preference,heritable variation in offspring viability must be present

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Parasites indicate plumage brightness

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Swallow tail feather length indicates ectoparasite resistance

Swallow chicks have fewer mites if their biological, but not foster, fathers had longer tail feathers

Cross-fostered chicksSame nest as father

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Peahens prefer males with eyespots which have better offspring survival