Tregenza Tom, Wedell Nina
Ecology and Evolution Group, School of Biology, University of Leeds, UK.
Nature. 2002 Jan 3;415(6867):71-3. doi: 10.1038/415071a.
Why do females typically mate with more than one male? Female mating patterns have broad implications for sexual selection, speciation and conflicts of interest between the sexes, and yet they are poorly understood. Matings inevitably have costs, and for females, the benefits of taking more than one mate are rarely obvious. One possible explanation is that females gain benefits because they can avoid using sperm from genetically incompatible males, or invest less in the offspring of such males. It has been shown that mating with more than one male can increase offspring viability, but we present the first clear demonstration that this occurs because females with several mates avoid the negative effects of genetic incompatibility. We show that in crickets, the eggs of females that mate only with siblings have decreased hatching success. However, if females mate with both a sibling and a non-sibling they avoid altogether the low egg viability associated with sibling matings. If similar effects occur in other species, inbreeding avoidance may be important in understanding the prevalence of multiple mating.
为什么雌性通常会与多个雄性交配?雌性的交配模式对性选择、物种形成以及两性之间的利益冲突有着广泛的影响,然而人们对其却知之甚少。交配不可避免地会有代价,而对雌性来说,与多个雄性交配的好处很少是显而易见的。一种可能的解释是,雌性获得好处是因为它们可以避免使用来自基因不相容雄性的精子,或者减少对这类雄性后代的投入。已经表明,与多个雄性交配可以提高后代的生存能力,但我们首次明确证明这种情况的发生是因为有多个配偶的雌性避免了基因不相容的负面影响。我们表明,在蟋蟀中,只与兄弟姐妹交配的雌性所产的卵孵化成功率降低。然而,如果雌性既与兄弟姐妹交配,又与非兄弟姐妹交配,它们就完全避免了与兄弟姐妹交配相关的低卵生存能力。如果其他物种也有类似的效应,那么避免近亲繁殖可能对理解多次交配的普遍性很重要。