Garamszegi László Zsolt, Eens Marcel, Erritzøe Johannes, Møller Anders Pape
Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Campus Drie Eiken, Universiteitsplein 1, B-2610 Wilrijk, Belgium.
Proc Biol Sci. 2005 Jan 22;272(1559):159-66. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2004.2940.
Natural selection may favour sexually similar brain size owing to similar selection pressures in males and females, while sexual selection may lead to sexually dimorphic brains. For example, sperm competition involves clear-cut sex differences in behaviour, as males display, mate guard and copulate with females, while females choose among males, and solicit or reject copulations. These behaviours may require fundamentally different neural government in the two sexes leading to sex-dependent brain evolution. Using two phylogenetic approaches in a comparative study, we tested for roles of both natural and sexual-selection pressures on brain size evolution of birds. In accordance with the natural-selection theory, relative brain size of males coevolved with that of females, which may be the result of adaptation to similar environmental constraints such as feeding innovation. However, the mode of brain size evolution differed between the sexes, and factors associated with sperm competition as reflected by extra-pair paternity may give rise to sexually size dimorphic brains. Specifically, species in which females have larger brains than males were found to have a higher degree of extra-pair paternity independently of potentially confounding factors, whereas species in which males have relatively larger brains than females appeared to have lower rates of extra-pair paternity. Hence, the evolution of sperm competition may select for complex behaviours together with the associated neural substrates in the sex that has a higher potential to control extra-pair copulations at the observed levels. Brain function may thus be affected differently in males and females by sexual selection.
由于雄性和雌性面临相似的选择压力,自然选择可能有利于两性大脑大小相似,而性选择可能导致两性大脑出现差异。例如,精子竞争涉及明显的性别行为差异,雄性会展示、守护配偶并与雌性交配,而雌性则在雄性中进行选择,并主动要求或拒绝交配。这些行为可能需要两性在神经调控上存在根本差异,从而导致与性别相关的大脑进化。在一项比较研究中,我们使用两种系统发育方法,测试了自然选择和性选择压力在鸟类大脑大小进化中的作用。根据自然选择理论,雄性的相对脑容量与雌性共同进化,这可能是适应类似环境限制(如觅食创新)的结果。然而,两性在大脑大小进化模式上存在差异,与额外配对亲子关系所反映的精子竞争相关的因素,可能导致两性大脑大小出现差异。具体而言,发现雌性大脑比雄性大脑大的物种,独立于潜在混杂因素,具有更高程度的额外配对亲子关系,而雄性大脑相对比雌性大脑大的物种,似乎具有较低的额外配对亲子关系发生率。因此,精子竞争的进化可能会选择复杂行为以及与之相关的神经基质,在具有更高潜在能力在观察水平上控制额外配对交配的性别中。因此,性选择可能会对雄性和雌性的大脑功能产生不同的影响。