Eberhard William G
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, and Escuela de Biología, Universidad de Costa Rica, Ciudad Universitaria, Costa Rica.
Evolution. 2004 Sep;58(9):1947-70. doi: 10.1554/04-143.
Male structures specialized to contact females during sexual interactions often diverge relatively rapidly over evolutionary time. Previous explanations for this pattern invoked sexual selection by female choice, but new ideas emphasize possible sexually antagonistic coevolution resulting from male-female conflict over control of fertilization. The two types of selection have often not been carefully distinguished. They do not theoretically exclude one another, but they have not necessarily had equally important roles in producing rapid evolutionary divergence. To date, most recent empirical studies of antagonistic coevolution have emphasized only a few taxa. This study uses the abundant but little-used data in the taxonomic literature on morphology to evaluate the roles of antagonistic coevolution and traditional female choice over a wide taxonomic spectrum (61 families of arthropods, mostly insects and spiders). Groups with species-specific male structures that contact females were checked for coevolution of species-specific female structures that are contacted by the male and that have mechanical properties that could potentially defend her against the male. Facultatively deployable, species-specific female defensive structures, a design that would seem likely to evolve frequently under the sexually antagonistic coevolution hypothesis, were completely absent (0% of 106 structures in 84 taxonomic groups). Although likely cases of sexually antagonistic coevolution exist, using conservative criteria, 79.2% of the 106 structures lacked even potentially defensive female coevolution. A common pattern (53.8% of 106) was a nearly complete absence of female change in areas contacted by species-specific male structures. Post-hoc arguments invoking possible coevolution of defensive female behavior instead of morphology, or of female sensitivities and responses to male sensory traps, could enable the sexually antagonistic coevolution hypothesis to explain these data. No case of such coevolution of female behavior or sensitivities has been demonstrated, and there are additional reasons to doubt that they are general explanations for the data presented here. Detailed studies of female resistance behavior could help illuminate several issues. The possibility of a greater role for antagonistic coevolution in reproductive physiology than in morphology and the possibility that female choice and sexually antagonistic coevolution have both been important in some lineages are discussed.
在有性互动过程中专门用于接触雌性的雄性结构,在进化时间里往往分化得相对较快。此前对这种模式的解释援引了雌性选择导致的性选择,但新观点强调了由于雌雄在受精控制上的冲突而可能产生的性对抗协同进化。这两种选择类型常常没有得到仔细区分。它们在理论上并不相互排斥,但在产生快速进化分化方面不一定发挥了同等重要的作用。迄今为止,最近关于对抗性协同进化的大多数实证研究只强调了少数几个分类群。本研究利用分类学文献中关于形态学的丰富但很少使用的数据,在广泛的分类谱系(61个节肢动物科,主要是昆虫和蜘蛛)中评估对抗性协同进化和传统雌性选择的作用。对具有接触雌性的物种特异性雄性结构的类群,检查是否存在雄性所接触的物种特异性雌性结构的协同进化,这些雌性结构具有可能保护其免受雄性侵害的机械特性。在性对抗协同进化假说下似乎很可能频繁进化的兼性可部署、物种特异性雌性防御结构完全不存在(84个分类群中的106个结构中有0%)。尽管存在可能的性对抗协同进化案例,但使用保守标准,106个结构中有79.2%甚至缺乏潜在的防御性雌性协同进化。一种常见模式(106个中有53.8%)是在物种特异性雄性结构所接触的区域,雌性几乎完全没有变化。事后提出的关于防御性雌性行为而非形态学的可能协同进化,或者雌性对雄性感官陷阱的敏感性和反应的协同进化的观点,可能使性对抗协同进化假说能够解释这些数据。尚未证明有雌性行为或敏感性的这种协同进化案例,而且还有其他理由怀疑它们是此处所呈现数据的普遍解释。对雌性抵抗行为的详细研究可能有助于阐明几个问题。讨论了对抗性协同进化在生殖生理学中比在形态学中发挥更大作用的可能性,以及雌性选择和性对抗协同进化在某些谱系中都很重要的可能性。