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母性智慧:优势雌性能决定赤狐(Vulpes vulpes)后代的扩散。

Mother knows best: dominant females determine offspring dispersal in red foxes (Vulpes vulpes).

机构信息

School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2011;6(7):e22145. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0022145. Epub 2011 Jul 20.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Relatedness between group members is central to understanding the causes of animal dispersal. In many group-living mammals this can be complicated as extra-pair copulations result in offspring having varying levels of relatedness to the dominant animals, leading to a potential conflict between male and female dominants over offspring dispersal strategies. To avoid resource competition and inbreeding, dominant males might be expected to evict unrelated males and related females, whereas the reverse strategy would be expected for dominant females.

METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We used microsatellites and long-term data from an urban fox (Vulpes vulpes) population to compare dispersal strategies between offspring with intra- and extra-group fathers and mothers of differing social status in red foxes. Relatedness to the dominant male had no effect on dispersal in offspring of either sex, whereas there was a strong effect of relatedness to resident females on offspring dispersal independent of population density. Males with dominant mothers dispersed significantly more often than males with subordinate mothers, whereas dispersing females were significantly more likely to have subordinate mothers compared to philopatric females.

CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This is the first study to demonstrate that relatedness to resident females is important in juvenile dispersal in group-living mammals. Male dispersal may be driven by inbreeding avoidance, whereas female dispersal appears to be influenced by the fitness advantages associated with residing with the same-sex dominant parent. Selection pressure for paternal influence on offspring dispersal is low due to the limited costs associated with retaining unrelated males and the need for alternative inbreeding avoidance mechanisms between the dominant male and his female offspring. These findings have important implications for the evolution of dispersal and group living in social mammals, and our understanding of a key biological process.

摘要

背景

群体成员之间的亲缘关系是理解动物扩散原因的核心。在许多群体生活的哺乳动物中,这可能会变得复杂,因为额外的交配会导致后代与主要动物的亲缘关系不同,从而导致雄性和雌性主要动物在后代扩散策略上产生潜在冲突。为了避免资源竞争和近亲繁殖,雄性主导者可能会驱逐不相关的雄性和相关的雌性,而雌性主导者则可能会采取相反的策略。

方法/主要发现:我们使用微卫星和来自城市狐狸(Vulpes vulpes)种群的长期数据,比较了具有不同社会地位的亲代(包括具有内外群父亲和母亲的后代)的红狐的扩散策略。与主要雄性的亲缘关系对雌雄后代的扩散都没有影响,而与居留雌性的亲缘关系对后代的扩散有强烈影响,与种群密度无关。具有主导母亲的雄性比具有从属母亲的雄性更频繁地扩散,而与留守母亲相比,扩散的雌性更有可能具有从属母亲。

结论/意义:这是第一项研究表明,与居留雌性的亲缘关系在群体生活的哺乳动物的幼仔扩散中很重要。雄性的扩散可能是由避免近亲繁殖驱动的,而雌性的扩散似乎受到与同性主导父母一起居住的相关适应优势的影响。由于保留不相关雄性的成本有限,并且在主导雄性与其雌性后代之间需要替代的避免近亲繁殖的机制,因此对雄性影响后代扩散的选择压力较低。这些发现对社会哺乳动物的扩散和群体生活的进化以及我们对关键生物学过程的理解具有重要意义。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/778d/3140410/a485fb0ee52a/pone.0022145.g001.jpg

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