Rowe Locke, Cameron Erin, Day Troy
Department of Zoology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3G5, Canada.
Am Nat. 2005 May;165 Suppl 5:S5-18. doi: 10.1086/429395.
Verbal and quantitative genetic models of sexually antagonistic coevolution suggest that coevolutionary arms races should be common. Sexual selection favors exaggeration of male persistence traits that are costly to females, and females, in turn, are selected to resist these traits. The heightened resistance by females is thought to then favor further exaggeration in the male trait, leading to an escalating coevolutionary arms race between persistence and resistance traits. Much of this theory, however, is based on an (implicit) assumption that there are tight constraints on how female resistance can evolve. We develop a theory that identifies and relaxes these constraints, allowing female resistance to evolve in a fashion that better reflects known empirical patterns in the evolution of female preference functions (the resistance trait). Our results suggest that evolutionary arms races that lead to the exaggeration of persistence and resistance will be much less common than formerly predicted. Females sometimes evolve indifference to male traits rather than resistance and can even evolve to discriminate against these traits. These alternative outcomes depend on the existence of genetic variance in the components of the female sensory system underlying female resistance and on the strength of natural selection acting on these components. Female indifference tends to evolve when natural selection on the sensory system is weak, and under these conditions, sexually antagonistic coevolution tends not to reduce female fitness significantly at equilibrium. When natural selection on the female sensory system is strong, however, then arms races are more likely, and female fitness is then sometimes significantly depressed at equilibrium. Sexually antagonistic coevolution is thus likely to have strong deleterious effects on population fitness only when female sensory traits are under strong natural selection to perform functions in addition to those involved with mating. Together, these results suggest that identifying the nature of genetic variation in and the strength of natural selection on female resistance should be a central goal of future studies of sexual conflict.
性对抗协同进化的文字和定量遗传模型表明,协同进化的军备竞赛应该很常见。性选择有利于夸大那些对雌性代价高昂的雄性坚持性状,反过来,雌性则被选择去抵抗这些性状。雌性增强的抵抗力被认为会进而有利于雄性性状的进一步夸大,导致坚持性状和抵抗性状之间的协同进化军备竞赛不断升级。然而,该理论的大部分内容基于一个(隐含的)假设,即雌性抵抗力的进化受到严格限制。我们提出了一种理论,识别并放宽这些限制,使雌性抵抗力能够以一种更好地反映雌性偏好函数(抵抗性状)进化中已知经验模式的方式进化。我们的结果表明,导致坚持性状和抵抗性状夸大的进化军备竞赛将比以前预测的少见得多。雌性有时会进化出对雄性性状的冷漠而非抵抗,甚至会进化到歧视这些性状。这些不同的结果取决于雌性抵抗所基于的雌性感觉系统组成部分中遗传变异的存在,以及作用于这些组成部分的自然选择的强度。当对感觉系统的自然选择较弱时,雌性冷漠倾向于进化,在这些条件下,性对抗协同进化在平衡时往往不会显著降低雌性的适应性。然而,当对雌性感觉系统的自然选择较强时,军备竞赛更有可能发生,此时雌性适应性在平衡时有时会显著降低。因此,只有当雌性感觉性状在除交配相关功能之外还受到强烈自然选择以执行其他功能时,性对抗协同进化才可能对种群适应性产生强烈的有害影响。总之,这些结果表明,确定雌性抵抗力的遗传变异性质和自然选择强度应该是未来性冲突研究的核心目标。