Urbach Davnah, Cotton Samuel
Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne Lausanne, Switzerland.
Research Department of Genetics, Evolution & Environment, University College London London, UK.
Evol Appl. 2008 Nov;1(4):645-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1752-4571.2008.00041.x.
It is becoming increasingly recognized that fishing (and other forms of nonrandom harvesting) can have profound evolutionary consequences for life history traits. A recent and welcome publication provided the first description of how sexual selection might influence the outcome of fisheries-induced evolution (FIE). One of the main conclusions was that if sexual selection generates a positive relationship between body size and reproductive success, increased fishing pressure on large individuals causes stronger selection for smaller body size. Here, we re-evaluate the sexual selection interpretation of the relationship between body size and reproductive success, and suggest it may in fact be representative of a more general case of pure natural selection. The consequences of sexual selection on FIE are likely to be complicated and dynamic, and we provide additional perspectives to these new and exciting results. Selection differentials and trait variance are considered, with density-dependent and genetic effects on the strength and the direction of sexual selection given particular attention. We hope that our additional views on the role of sexual selection in FIE will encourage more theoretical and empirical work into this important application of evolutionary biology.
人们越来越认识到,捕鱼(以及其他形式的非随机捕捞)可能会对生活史特征产生深远的进化影响。最近有一篇值得欢迎的出版物首次描述了性选择如何可能影响渔业诱导进化(FIE)的结果。其中一个主要结论是,如果性选择在体型和繁殖成功之间产生正相关关系,那么对大型个体增加捕捞压力会导致对较小体型的更强选择。在这里,我们重新评估体型与繁殖成功之间关系的性选择解释,并表明它实际上可能代表了纯自然选择这一更普遍情况。性选择对FIE的影响可能是复杂且动态的,我们为这些新的、令人兴奋的结果提供了更多视角。考虑了选择差异和性状方差,特别关注了密度依赖性以及性选择强度和方向的遗传效应。我们希望我们对性选择在FIE中作用的额外观点将鼓励更多针对进化生物学这一重要应用的理论和实证研究。