Gowaty Patricia Adair
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 621 Charles E. Young Drive, University of California, Los Angeles 90095, USA.
J Evol Biol. 2008 Sep;21(5):1189-200. doi: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2008.01559.x. Epub 2008 Jun 28.
The reproductive compensation hypothesis says that individuals constrained by ecological or social forces to reproduce with partners they do not prefer compensate for likely offspring viability deficits. The reproductive compensation hypothesis assumes that (i) pathogens and parasites evolve more rapidly than their hosts, (ii) mate preferences predict variation in health and viability of offspring, (iii) social and ecological factors keep some individuals from mating with their preferred partners (some are constrained to mate with partners they do not prefer), (iv) all individuals may be induced to compensate, so that (v) variation in compensation is due to environmental and developmental factors affecting between-individual abilities to express compensatory mechanisms. Selection favouring compensation may act through variation in prezygotic physiological mechanisms, zygotic mechanisms, or parental care to eggs or young that enhance offspring health, increasing the likelihood that some offspring survive to reproductive age, often at a survival cost to the parents. Compensation may be through increased number of eggs laid or offspring born, a compensatory effort working during a single reproductive bout that sometimes will match the number of offspring surviving to reproductive age produced by unconstrained parents during the same bout. The reproductive compensation hypothesis therefore predicts trade-offs in components of fitness for breeders, such that parents constrained to mating with a nonpreferred partner, but who compensate sometimes match their current productivity (number of offspring at reproductive age) to unconstrained parents (those breeding with their preferred partners), and, when all else is equal, die faster than unconstrained parents. The reproductive compensation hypothesis emphasizes that reproductive competition is not just between constrained and unconstrained individuals, but also among constrained individuals who do and do not compensate. The reproductive compensation hypothesis may thus explain previously unexplained between-population and within-population, between-individual variation in reproductive success, survival, physiology and behaviour.
生殖补偿假说认为,受生态或社会力量限制而与非偏好伴侣繁殖的个体,会补偿可能出现的后代生存能力不足。生殖补偿假说假定:(i)病原体和寄生虫的进化速度比其宿主更快;(ii)配偶偏好可预测后代健康和生存能力的差异;(iii)社会和生态因素使一些个体无法与偏好的伴侣交配(一些个体被迫与非偏好的伴侣交配);(iv)所有个体都可能被诱导进行补偿,因此(v)补偿的差异是由于环境和发育因素影响个体表达补偿机制的能力。有利于补偿的选择可能通过合子前生理机制、合子机制或对卵或幼崽的亲代抚育的差异起作用,这些机制可增强后代健康,增加一些后代存活至生殖年龄的可能性,而这通常会以父母的生存为代价。补偿可能通过增加产卵数量或出生后代数量来实现,这是在单次繁殖过程中起作用的一种补偿努力,有时会与不受限制的父母在同一繁殖过程中存活至生殖年龄的后代数量相匹配。因此,生殖补偿假说预测了繁殖者适合度各组成部分之间的权衡,即被迫与非偏好伴侣交配但进行补偿的父母,有时其当前生产力(生殖年龄的后代数量)会与不受限制(与偏好伴侣繁殖)的父母相当,并且在其他条件相同的情况下,其死亡速度比不受限制的父母更快。生殖补偿假说强调,生殖竞争不仅存在于受限制和不受限制的个体之间,也存在于进行补偿和不进行补偿的受限制个体之间。生殖补偿假说因此可以解释以前无法解释的种群间和种群内、个体间在生殖成功、生存、生理和行为方面的差异。