Mammalian Behaviour & Evolution Group, School of Veterinary Science, University of Liverpool, Leahurst Campus, Neston, UK.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2011 May;86(2):341-66. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-185X.2010.00149.x.
Following Darwin's original insights regarding sexual selection, studies of intrasexual competition have mainly focused on male competition for mates; by contrast, female reproductive competition has received less attention. Here, we review evidence that female mammals compete for both resources and mates in order to secure reproductive benefits. We describe how females compete for resources such as food, nest sites, and protection by means of dominance relationships, territoriality and inter-group aggression, and by inhibiting the reproduction of other females. We also describe evidence that female mammals compete for mates and consider the ultimate causes of such behaviour, including competition for access to resources provided by mates, sperm limitation and prevention of future resource competition. Our review reveals female competition to be a potentially widespread and significant evolutionary selection pressure among mammals, particularly competition for resources among social species for which most evidence is currently available. We report that female competition is associated with many diverse adaptations, from overtly aggressive behaviour, weaponry, and conspicuous sexual signals to subtle and often complex social behaviour involving olfactory signalling, alliance formation, altruism and spite, and even cases where individuals appear to inhibit their own reproduction. Overall, despite some obvious parallels with male phenotypic traits favoured under sexual selection, it appears that fundamental differences in the reproductive strategies of the sexes (ultimately related to parental investment) commonly lead to contrasting competitive goals and adaptations. Because female adaptations for intrasexual competition are often less conspicuous than those of males, they are generally more challenging to study. In particular, since females often employ competitive strategies that directly influence not only the number but also the quality (survival and reproductive success) of their own offspring, as well as the relative reproductive success of others, a multigenerational view ideally is required to quantify the full extent of variation in female fitness resulting from intrasexual competition. Nonetheless, current evidence indicates that the reproductive success of female mammals can also be highly variable over shorter time scales, with significant reproductive skew related to competitive ability. Whether we choose to describe the outcome of female reproductive competition (competition for mates, for mates controlling resources, or for resources per se) as sexual selection depends on how sexual selection is defined. Considering sexual selection strictly as resulting from differential mating or fertilisation success, the role of female competition for the sperm of preferred (or competitively successful) males appears particularly worthy of more detailed investigation. Broader definitions of sexual selection have recently been proposed to encompass the impact on reproduction of competition for resources other than mates. Although the merits of such definitions are a matter of ongoing debate, our review highlights that understanding the evolutionary causes and consequences of female reproductive competition indeed requires a broader perspective than has traditionally been assumed. We conclude that future research in this field offers much exciting potential to address new and fundamentally important questions relating to social and mating-system evolution.
继达尔文最初关于性选择的见解之后,对种内竞争的研究主要集中在雄性对配偶的竞争上;相比之下,雌性生殖竞争受到的关注较少。在这里,我们回顾了雌性哺乳动物为了获得生殖利益而竞争资源和配偶的证据。我们描述了雌性如何通过支配关系、领地性和群体间攻击以及抑制其他雌性的繁殖来竞争资源,例如食物、巢穴地点和保护。我们还描述了雌性哺乳动物竞争配偶的证据,并考虑了这种行为的终极原因,包括竞争获得配偶提供的资源、精子限制和防止未来的资源竞争。我们的综述表明,雌性竞争是哺乳动物中一种潜在的广泛而重要的进化选择压力,特别是对于目前大多数证据都来自的社交物种而言,竞争是为了获得资源。我们报告说,雌性竞争与许多不同的适应有关,从公然的攻击行为、武器和明显的性信号到微妙而通常复杂的社会行为,包括嗅觉信号、联盟形成、利他主义和恶意,甚至在某些情况下,个体似乎会抑制自己的繁殖。总的来说,尽管与性选择下雄性表型特征有一些明显的相似之处,但性别之间生殖策略的根本差异(最终与亲代投资有关)通常会导致竞争目标和适应的对比。由于雌性种内竞争的适应通常不如雄性的明显,因此它们通常更难研究。特别是,由于雌性通常采用竞争策略,不仅直接影响其自身后代的数量,还影响其自身后代的质量(生存和繁殖成功率)以及其他个体的相对繁殖成功率,因此需要从多代的角度来量化由于雌性之间的竞争而导致的雌性适应度的全部变化。尽管如此,目前的证据表明,雌性哺乳动物的生殖成功率也可以在较短的时间内发生很大的变化,与竞争能力相关的显著生殖倾斜。无论我们选择将雌性生殖竞争的结果(竞争配偶、竞争配偶控制的资源或竞争资源本身)描述为性选择,都取决于如何定义性选择。如果将性选择严格定义为由于交配或受精成功率的差异而导致的选择,那么雌性竞争优先(或竞争成功)雄性的精子的作用似乎特别值得更详细的研究。最近提出了更广泛的性选择定义,以包括除配偶以外的资源竞争对繁殖的影响。尽管这些定义的优点是一个正在争论的问题,但我们的综述强调,理解雌性生殖竞争的进化原因和后果确实需要比传统上假设的更广泛的视角。我们的结论是,该领域的未来研究为解决与社会和交配系统进化有关的新的和根本重要的问题提供了很大的潜力。