Kawecki Tadeusz J
Unit for Ecology and Evolution, Department of Biology, University of Fribourg, Chemin du Musée 10, CH-1700 Fribourg, Switzerland.
Am Nat. 2003 Oct;162(4):415-26. doi: 10.1086/378048. Epub 2003 Oct 16.
If gene flow occurs through both sexes but only females contribute to population growth, adaptation to marginal (sink) habitats should be differentially affected by male versus female dispersal. Here I address this problem with two models. First, I consider the fate of a rare allele that improves fitness in the marginal habitat but reduces fitness in the core (source) habitat. Then I study the evolution of a polygenic character mediating a trade-off in fitness between the habitats. Both approaches led to qualitatively similar predictions. The effect of a difference in the dispersal rate between the sexes depends on the degree to which immigration from the core habitat boosts the reproductive output from the marginal habitat. This boost is slight if the marginal habitat is able to sustain well a population without immigration. In that case, both female- and male-biased dispersal is more favorable for adaptation to marginal habitats than equal dispersal of both sexes (assuming that the dispersal rate averaged over the sexes is kept constant). In contrast, if the marginal habitat is an absolute sink unable to sustain a population without immigration, the conditions for adaptation to that habitat are least favorable under highly male-biased dispersal and most favorable under highly female-biased dispersal. Under some circumstances, high average (male+female) dispersal is more favorable than low dispersal. Thus, gene flow should not be seen solely as thwarting adaptation to marginal habitats. The results are interpreted in terms of how male and female dispersal affects the relative rate of gene flow from the source to the sink habitat and in the opposite direction. This study predicts that ecological niches of taxa with female-biased dispersal should tend to be broader and more evolutionarily flexible.
如果基因流动通过两性发生,但只有雌性对种群增长有贡献,那么对边缘(汇)栖息地的适应应该会受到雄性与雌性扩散的不同影响。在此,我用两个模型来解决这个问题。首先,我考虑一个稀有等位基因的命运,它在边缘栖息地提高适合度,但在核心(源)栖息地降低适合度。然后我研究一个多基因性状的进化,该性状在两个栖息地的适合度之间进行权衡。两种方法都得出了定性相似的预测。两性扩散率差异的影响取决于核心栖息地的迁入对边缘栖息地繁殖产出的促进程度。如果边缘栖息地在没有迁入的情况下能够很好地维持种群,那么这种促进作用就很小。在这种情况下,雌性偏向扩散和雄性偏向扩散都比两性平等扩散更有利于对边缘栖息地的适应(假设两性平均扩散率保持不变)。相反,如果边缘栖息地是一个绝对的汇,没有迁入就无法维持种群,那么在高度雄性偏向扩散的情况下,适应该栖息地的条件最不利,而在高度雌性偏向扩散的情况下最有利。在某些情况下,高平均(雄性 + 雌性)扩散比低扩散更有利。因此,基因流动不应仅仅被视为阻碍对边缘栖息地的适应。研究结果是根据雄性和雌性扩散如何影响从源栖息地到汇栖息地以及相反方向的基因流动相对速率来解释的。这项研究预测,具有雌性偏向扩散的分类群的生态位应该倾向于更广泛且在进化上更具灵活性。