Puurtinen Mikael, Kaitala Veijo
Department of Biological and Environmental Science, P.O. Box 35, University of Jyväskylä, 40351 Jyväskylä, Finland.
Am Nat. 2002 Nov;160(5):645-60. doi: 10.1086/342821.
Limited availability of mating partners has been proposed as an explanation for the occurrence of simultaneous hermaphroditism in animals with pair mating. When low population density or low mobility of a species limits the number of potential mates, simultaneous hermaphrodites may have a selective advantage because, first, they are able to adjust the allocation of resources between male and female functions in order to maximize fitness; second, in a hermaphroditic population the likelihood of meeting a partner is higher because all individuals are potential mates; and, third, in the absence of mating partners, many simultaneously hermaphroditic animals have the option of reproducing through self-fertilization. Recognizing that mate availability is central to the existing theory of hermaphroditism in animals, it is important to examine the effects of mate search on predictions of the stability of hermaphroditism. Many hermaphroditic animals can increase the number of potential mates they contact by active searching. However, since mate search has costs in terms of time and energy, the increased number of potential mates will be traded off against the amount of resources that can be allocated to the production of gametes. We explore the consequences of this trade-off to the evolution of mating strategies and to the selective advantage of self-fertilization. We show that in low and moderate population densities, poor mate-search efficiency and high costs of searching stabilize hermaphroditism and bias sex allocation toward female function. In addition, in very low population densities, there is strong selective advantage for self-fertilization, but this advantage decreases considerably in species with high mate-search efficiency. Most important, however, we present a novel evolutionary prediction: when mate search is efficient, disruptive frequency-dependent selection on time allocation to mate search leads to the evolution of searching and nonsearching phenotypes and, ultimately, to the evolution of males and females.
对于成对交配的动物中同时存在雌雄同体现象,交配伙伴的可获得性有限被认为是一种解释。当物种的低种群密度或低移动性限制了潜在配偶的数量时,同时雌雄同体可能具有选择优势,原因如下:其一,它们能够调整雄性和雌性功能之间的资源分配,以实现适应性最大化;其二,在雌雄同体的种群中,遇到配偶的可能性更高,因为所有个体都是潜在配偶;其三,在没有交配伙伴的情况下,许多同时雌雄同体的动物可以选择通过自体受精进行繁殖。认识到配偶可获得性是动物雌雄同体现有理论的核心,考察配偶寻找对雌雄同体稳定性预测的影响就很重要。许多雌雄同体的动物可以通过主动寻找来增加它们接触到的潜在配偶数量。然而,由于寻找配偶在时间和精力方面存在成本,增加的潜在配偶数量将与可分配用于配子生产的资源量进行权衡。我们探讨这种权衡对交配策略进化以及自体受精选择优势的影响。我们表明,在低和中等种群密度下,较差的配偶寻找效率和高昂的寻找成本会使雌雄同体现象稳定,并使性别分配偏向雌性功能。此外,在极低的种群密度下,自体受精具有很强的选择优势,但在配偶寻找效率高的物种中,这种优势会大幅降低。然而,最重要的是,我们提出了一个新的进化预测:当配偶寻找效率高时,对分配给配偶寻找的时间进行频率依赖的破坏性选择会导致寻找和不寻找表型的进化,最终导致雄性和雌性的进化。