精子是滥交鸣禽的物种变异表型。

IF 3.1 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Evolution Pub Date : 2024-12-22 DOI:10.1093/evolut/qpae154
Jan T Lifjeld, Emily R A Cramer, Erica H Leder, Kjetil Lysne Voje
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引用次数: 0

摘要

不同物种的精子形态差异很大。如果精子特征在同种异交中迅速分化,并在二次接触时导致同种精子优先,则可能有助于物种的分化。然而,精子性状在驱动同种前隔离中的作用却鲜有研究。在这里,我们检验了这样一个假设:在物种形成过程的早期,雌性滥交会促进鸣禽种群间精子长度分布重叠的减少。我们收集了 20 对已知精子长度分布的种群的数据集、已发表的分化时间估计值以及从配对外父子关系率或相对睾丸大小得出的雌性滥交指数。我们发现,在更滥交的物种中,精子长度分布的分化速度更快。精子长度分布之间更快的分化是由更滥交物种中更低的性状方差造成的,而不是由平均精子长度更快的分化造成的。方差的降低可能是由于精子竞争对精子长度产生了更强的稳定选择。如果异地繁殖中精子长度的差异会导致同种精子在同地繁殖中的优先权(这一点还有待经验证明),那么雌性滥交可能会促进鸣禽的前配偶隔离和快速物种分化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sperm as a speciation phenotype in promiscuous songbirds.

Sperm morphology varies considerably among species. Sperm traits may contribute to speciation if they diverge fast in allopatry and cause conspecific sperm precedence upon secondary contact. However, their role in driving prezygotic isolation has been poorly investigated. Here we test the hypothesis that, early in the speciation process, female promiscuity promotes a reduction in overlap in sperm length distributions among songbird populations. We assembled a data set of 20 pairs of populations with known sperm length distributions, a published estimate of divergence time, and an index of female promiscuity derived from extrapair paternity rates or relative testis size. We found that sperm length distributions diverged more rapidly in more promiscuous species. Faster divergence between sperm length distributions was caused by the lower variance in the trait in more promiscuous species, and not by faster divergence of the mean sperm lengths. The reduced variance is presumably due to stronger stabilizing selection on sperm length mediated by sperm competition. If divergent sperm length optima in allopatry causes conspecific sperm precedence in sympatry, which remains to be shown empirically, female promiscuity may promote prezygotic isolation, and rapid speciation in songbirds.

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来源期刊
Evolution
Evolution 环境科学-进化生物学
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
9.10%
发文量
0
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Evolution, published for the Society for the Study of Evolution, is the premier publication devoted to the study of organic evolution and the integration of the various fields of science concerned with evolution. The journal presents significant and original results that extend our understanding of evolutionary phenomena and processes.
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