Sheldon Ben C
Edward Grey Institute, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS, United Kingdom.
Am Nat. 2004 Jan;163(1):40-54. doi: 10.1086/381003. Epub 2004 Jan 14.
Trivers and Willard's suggestion that natural selection favors maternal control of offspring sex ratio in relation to maternal condition has been much debated. The theoretical plausibility of the idea, under some conditions, is firmly established, and there is strong empirical support for conditional sex allocation in some taxa. However, the extent to which this hypothesis can be applied to mammals, particularly ungulates, has been more controversial. We used meta-analysis to review published studies of the Trivers-Willard hypothesis within ungulates and to assess the overall level of empirical support for the hypothesis. Overall, data from 37 studies of 18 species suggested a weak but significant positive correlation between maternal condition and sex ratio (r=+0.09). However, average effect size differed markedly between different categories of studies. Studies using measures of maternal condition that were taken preconception and on the basis of behavioral dominance provided strong evidence for a relationship between maternal condition and the sex ratio (r=+0.17-0.25). In contrast, studies that used morphological or physiological measures of condition that were measured postconception provided little or no evidence for a relationship between maternal condition and sex ratio (r=+0.05-0.06). There are several reasons to suggest that data collected postconception and relying on morphological measures of condition are less likely to capture variables that cause selection for biased sex allocation. In addition, we found that the relationship between sex ratio and maternal condition depended on life-history characteristics; relationships were stronger when sexual size dimorphism was more male biased and when gestation periods were longer. Overall, our analyses suggest that data from ungulates are consistent with the Trivers-Willard hypothesis but only when appropriate measures are used.
特里弗斯和威拉德提出的观点,即自然选择有利于母体根据自身状况控制后代的性别比例,这一观点一直备受争议。在某些条件下,该观点在理论上的合理性已得到确凿证实,并且在一些分类群中,有强有力的实证支持条件性性别分配。然而,这一假设在哺乳动物,尤其是有蹄类动物中的适用程度更具争议性。我们运用荟萃分析来回顾已发表的关于有蹄类动物中特里弗斯 - 威拉德假设的研究,并评估该假设的整体实证支持水平。总体而言,来自对18个物种的37项研究的数据表明,母体状况与性别比例之间存在微弱但显著的正相关(r = +0.09)。然而,不同类别的研究之间平均效应大小差异显著。使用受孕前基于行为优势所采取的母体状况测量方法的研究,为母体状况与性别比例之间的关系提供了有力证据(r = +0.17 - 至0.25)。相比之下,使用受孕后测量的形态学或生理学状况测量方法的研究,几乎没有或根本没有提供母体状况与性别比例之间关系的证据(r = +0.05 - 0.06)。有几个原因表明,受孕后收集的、依赖形态学状况测量的数据不太可能捕捉到导致偏向性性别分配选择的变量。此外,我们发现性别比例与母体状况之间的关系取决于生活史特征;当两性异形在雄性方面更为明显且妊娠期更长时,这种关系更强。总体而言,我们的分析表明,有蹄类动物的数据与特里弗斯 - 威拉德假设一致,但前提是使用适当的测量方法。