Ecology, Evolution, and Behaviour, School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand.
Integr Comp Biol. 2005 Nov;45(5):903-14. doi: 10.1093/icb/45.5.903.
The sex-specific slopes of Bateman's gradients have important implications for understanding animal mating systems, including patterns of sexual selection and reproductive competition. Intersexual differences in the fitness benefits derived from mating with multiple partners are expected to yield distinct patterns of reproductive success for males and females, with variance in direct fitness predicted to be greater among males. These analyses assume that typically all adults are reproductive and that failure to produce offspring is non-adaptive. Among some species of cooperatively breeding birds and mammals, however, non-breeding adult alloparents are common and may comprise the majority of individuals in social groups. The presence of a large number of non-breeding adults, particularly when coupled with greater social suppression of reproduction among females, may alter the relative variance in direct fitness between the sexes, thereby generating an apparent contradiction to Bateman's Paradigm. To explore quantitatively the effects of non-breeding alloparents on variance in reproductive success, we used genetic estimates of parentage and reproductive success drawn from the literature to calculate the relative variability in direct fitness for females and males in alloparental and "other" societies of birds and mammals. Our analyses indicate that in mammals and, to a lesser extent, in birds, variability in direct fitness is greater among females in species characterized by the presence of non-breeding alloparents. These data suggest that social interactions, including social suppression of reproduction, are powerful determinants of individual direct fitness that may modify sex-specific patterns of reproductive variance from those described by Bateman.
Bateman 梯度的性别特异性斜率对理解动物交配系统具有重要意义,包括性选择和生殖竞争的模式。从与多个伴侣交配中获得的适应性利益的两性差异预计会导致雄性和雌性的生殖成功呈现出截然不同的模式,直接适应性的方差预计在雄性中更大。这些分析假设通常所有成年人都是有生殖能力的,并且不能产生后代是非适应性的。然而,在一些合作繁殖的鸟类和哺乳动物物种中,非繁殖的成年同种个体是常见的,并且可能构成社会群体中大多数个体。大量非繁殖成年个体的存在,特别是当雌性生殖受到更大的社会抑制时,可能会改变两性之间直接适应性方差的相对程度,从而产生与 Bateman 悖论明显矛盾的结果。为了定量研究非繁殖同种个体对生殖成功率方差的影响,我们使用文献中得出的亲缘关系和生殖成功率的遗传估计,计算了鸟类和哺乳动物中同种个体和“其他”社会中雌性和雄性的直接适应性方差的相对变异性。我们的分析表明,在哺乳动物中,而且在较小程度上在鸟类中,具有非繁殖同种个体的物种中,雌性的直接适应性方差更大。这些数据表明,社会相互作用,包括生殖的社会抑制,是个体直接适应性的有力决定因素,可能会改变 Bateman 描述的性别特异性生殖方差模式。