Wilkinson Gerald S
Department of Zoology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9 3JT, U.K.
Evolution. 1987 Jan;41(1):11-21. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1987.tb05767.x.
Several models for sexual selection, both by male-male competition and female choice, predict that a character which covaries with mating success should be near an equilibrium where the intensity of sexual selection opposes viability selection. This prediction was used to design experiments for estimating the intensity of sexual and viability selection on wing length in a recently captured population of Drosophila melanogaster. Observations of matings by males color-marked for wing length indicated that the standardized sexual selection differential on wing length was 0.24 under a wide range of effective sex ratios. After estimating the heritability of wing length to be 0.62, the expected standardized response due to sexual selection was calculated as 0.15 (SE = 0.15). The response due to viability selection was then estimated by comparing wing lengths of progeny of flies that had been randomly mated, thereby preventing sexual selection, with progeny of flies that had been allowed to acquire mates in a mass-mating chamber. The results support an equilibrium model in that the standardized response due to viability selection (-0.31, SE = 0.08) was opposite in sign and similar in magnitude to the estimated response due to sexual selection. Observations of females orienting in front of males which differed in wing length indicated that the mating advantage accruing to long-winged males was not due to female choice. Instead, male-male competition in which the larger of two randomly chosen males succeeded in mating, explains the observed sexual selection. An experimental analysis of genotype-environment interaction revealed that larval density had a nonlinear effect on mean wing length within sibships. If a population is displaced from equilibrium, therefore, the evolutionary trajectory of mean wing length will depend both on the intensity of selection and the environment in which that selection is operating.
有几种性选择模型,包括雄性间竞争和雌性选择,预测与交配成功相关的性状应接近一个平衡点,在该平衡点上,性选择的强度与生存力选择相互对抗。这一预测被用于设计实验,以估计在最近捕获的黑腹果蝇种群中,翅膀长度的性选择和生存力选择强度。对按翅膀长度进行颜色标记的雄性果蝇交配情况的观察表明,在广泛的有效性别比范围内,翅膀长度的标准化性选择差异为0.24。在估计翅膀长度的遗传力为0.62后,计算出由于性选择导致的预期标准化反应为0.15(标准误 = 0.15)。然后通过比较随机交配的果蝇后代(从而防止性选择)与在大规模交配室中获得配偶的果蝇后代的翅膀长度,来估计生存力选择导致的反应。结果支持了一个平衡模型,因为生存力选择导致的标准化反应(-0.31,标准误 = 0.08)在符号上与性选择导致的估计反应相反,且在大小上相似。对翅膀长度不同的雄性果蝇前的雌性定向的观察表明,长翅雄性果蝇获得的交配优势并非由于雌性选择。相反,在两个随机选择的雄性中较大的那个成功交配的雄性间竞争,解释了观察到的性选择。对基因型 - 环境相互作用的实验分析表明,幼虫密度对同胞内的平均翅膀长度有非线性影响。因此,如果一个种群偏离平衡,平均翅膀长度的进化轨迹将取决于选择强度和选择发生的环境。