为什么雌性交配繁殖?遗传益处综述。

M D Jennions, M Petrie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇综述的目的是考虑雌性在一个生殖周期中多次交配可能获得的潜在好处。简要探讨了非遗传效益和遗传效益之间的关系。我们认为,为了纯粹的非遗传利益而进行多次交配是不可能的,因为它总是会导致遗传利益的可能性。我们首先简要回顾了遗传对择偶有利的主要模型,以及择偶可以提高后代表现和儿子的性吸引力的支持证据。然后,我们解释了多重交配如何通过增加竞争的潜在种群数量来提高后代的适应性,当这种情况与交配或交配后的父权偏倚机制一起发生时。我们首先确定雌性在交配前使用交配前线索来确定配偶的情况。在最简单的情况下,雌性之所以选择交配,是因为她们发现了一个更优秀的伴侣,并在基因上进行了“交换”。这一过程的主要证据来自鸟类的额外配对交配。其次,我们注意到其他情况下,交配前的线索可能不太可靠,雌性与几个雄性交配,以促进交配后的机制,偏向父权。尽管在精子竞争和隐性女性选择之间存在区别,但我们指出,就产生更有活力或更具性吸引力的后代而言,多夫制的遗传益处并不取决于导致父权偏见的确切机制。父权偏向的交配后机制可能:(1)减少雄性和雌性对后代的遗传贡献之间的遗传不相容性;(2)如果交配后有利性状与自然选择条件下提高生产性能的性状之间存在正相关关系,则可以提高后代的生存能力;(3)增加儿子与一妻多夫制的雌性交配时获得父权的能力。第三种可能是,后代之间的遗传多样性是直接有利的。这可能是由于下注对冲(由于配偶评估错误或环境的时间波动),亲缘关系较差的兄弟姐妹之间有益的相互作用,或者根据当时的环境条件,有机会优先使用从一系列储存精子中提取的特定基因型精子使卵子受精。我们以群居昆虫为例,提供了后代遗传多样性在提高适合度中的作用的具体例子。我们得出结论,交配后机制提供了一种比交配前选择配偶更可靠的方式来选择基因相容的配偶。精子选择对女性进行隐性选择的一些最佳证据是由于选择了更相容的精子。两个未来的研究领域似乎是有利可图的。首先,需要更多的实验证据来证明多次交配通过遗传增益来提高后代的适应性。其次,多重交配在促进种群间的分类受精和增加生殖隔离方面的作用可能有助于我们理解同域物种形成。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Why do females mate multiply? A review of the genetic benefits.

The aim of this review is to consider the potential benefits that females may gain from mating more than once in a single reproductive cycle. The relationship between non-genetic and genetic benefits is briefly explored. We suggest that multiple mating for purely non-genetic benefits is unlikely as it invariably leads to the possibility of genetic benefits as well. We begin by briefly reviewing the main models for genetic benefits to mate choice, and the supporting evidence that choice can increase offspring performance and the sexual attractiveness of sons. We then explain how multiple mating can elevate offspring fitness by increasing the number of potential sires that compete, when this occurs in conjunction with mechanisms of paternity biasing that function in copula or post-copulation. We begin by identifying cases where females use pre-copulatory cues to identify mates prior to remating. In the simplest case, females remate because they identify a superior mate and 'trade up' genetically. The main evidence for this process comes from extra-pair copulation in birds. Second, we note other cases where pre-copulatory cues may be less reliable and females mate with several males to promote post-copulatory mechanisms that bias paternity. Although a distinction is drawn between sperm competition and cryptic female choice, we point out that the genetic benefits to polyandry in terms of producing more viable or sexually attractive offspring do not depend on the exact mechanism that leads to biased paternity. Post-copulatory mechanisms of paternity biasing may: (1) reduce genetic incompatibility between male and female genetic contributions to offspring; (2) increase offspring viability if there is a positive correlation between traits favoured post-copulation and those that improve performance under natural selection; (3) increase the ability of sons to gain paternity when they mate with polyandrous females. A third possibility is that genetic diversity among offspring is directly favoured. This can be due to bet-hedging (due to mate assessment errors or temporal fluctuations in the environment), beneficial interactions between less related siblings or the opportunity to preferentially fertilise eggs with sperm of a specific genotype drawn from a range of stored sperm depending on prevailing environmental conditions. We use case studies from the social insects to provide some concrete examples of the role of genetic diversity among progeny in elevating fitness. We conclude that post-copulatory mechanisms provide a more reliable way of selecting a genetically compatible mate than pre-copulatory mate choice. Some of the best evidence for cryptic female choice by sperm selection is due to selection of more compatible sperm. Two future areas of research seem likely to be profitable. First, more experimental evidence is needed demonstrating that multiple mating increases offspring fitness via genetic gains. Second, the role of multiple mating in promoting assortative fertilization and increasing reproductive isolation between populations may help us to understand sympatric speciation.

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