Department of Biological Sciences and W. M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA.
J Evol Biol. 2013 Oct;26(10):2135-45. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12229. Epub 2013 Aug 24.
Male genital morphology is remarkably diverse across internally fertilizing animals, a phenomenon largely attributed to sexual selection. Ecological differences across environments can alter the context of sexual selection, yet little research has addressed how this may influence the rapid, divergent evolution of male genitalia. Using the model system of Bahamas mosquitofish (Gambusia hubbsi) undergoing ecological speciation across blue holes, we used geometric morphometric methods to test (i) whether male genital shape (the small, approximately 1 mm long, distal tip of the sperm-transfer organ, the gonopodium) has diverged between populations with and without predatory fish and (ii) whether any observed divergence has a genetic basis. We additionally examined the effects of genetic relatedness and employed model selection to investigate other environmental factors (i.e. interspecific competition, adult sex ratio and resource availability) that could potentially influence genital shape via changes in sexual selection. Predation regime comprised the most important factor associated with male genital divergence in this system, although sex ratio and some aspects of resource availability had suggestive effects. We found consistent, heritable differences in male genital morphology between predation regimes: Bahamas mosquitofish coexisting with predatory fish possessed more elongate genital tips with reduced soft tissue compared with counterparts inhabiting blue holes without predatory fish. We suggest this may reflect selection for greater efficiency of sperm transfer and fertilization during rapid and often forced copulations in high-predation populations or differences in sexual conflict between predation regimes. Our study highlights the potential importance of ecological variation, particularly predation risk, in indirectly generating genital diversity.
雄性生殖器形态在有体内受精的动物中差异显著,这一现象主要归因于性选择。不同环境中的生态差异会改变性选择的环境背景,但很少有研究探讨这如何影响雄性生殖器的快速、趋异进化。我们使用正在经历生态物种形成的巴哈马鳉鱼(Gambusia hubbsi)模型系统,通过几何形态测量方法来检验:(i)是否在有和没有捕食鱼类的种群之间,雄性生殖器形状(小的、大约 1 毫米长的精子传递器官——生殖肢的远端尖端)发生了分歧;(ii)任何观察到的分歧是否具有遗传基础。我们还研究了遗传相关性的影响,并采用模型选择来研究其他环境因素(即种间竞争、成年性别比例和资源可用性),这些因素可能通过改变性选择而影响生殖器形状。捕食制度是该系统中与雄性生殖器分歧最相关的最重要因素,尽管性别比例和资源可用性的某些方面具有暗示作用。我们发现,在捕食制度之间,雄性生殖器形态存在一致的、可遗传的差异:与捕食鱼类共存的巴哈马鳉鱼具有更细长的生殖器尖端,与没有捕食鱼类的蓝洞种群相比,生殖器的软组织减少。我们认为这可能反映了在高捕食种群中,为了在快速且往往强制的交配中提高精子传递和受精的效率,或在捕食制度之间的性冲突方面存在差异。我们的研究强调了生态变化,特别是捕食风险,在间接产生生殖器多样性方面的潜在重要性。