Tregenza Tom, Wedell Nina
Ecology and Evolution Group, Department of Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom.
Department of Zoology, University of Stockholm, S-106 91, Stockholm, Sweden.
Evolution. 1998 Dec;52(6):1726-1730. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1998.tb02252.x.
Despite the importance of polyandry for sexual selection, the reasons why females frequently mate with several males remain poorly understood. A number of genetic benefits have been proposed, based on the idea that by taking multiple mates, females increase the likelihood that their offspring will be sired by genetically more compatible or superior males. If certain males have intrinsically "good genes," any female mating with them will produce superior offspring. Alternatively, if some males have genetic elements that are incompatible with a particular female, then she may benefit from polyandry if the sperm of such males are less likely to fertilize her eggs. We examined these hypotheses in the field cricket Gryllus bimaculatus (Orthoptera: Gryllidae). By allocating females identical numbers of matings but different numbers of mates we investigated the influence of number of mates on female fecundity, and both short- and long-term offspring fitness. This revealed no effect of number of mates on number of eggs laid. However, hatching success of eggs increased with number of mates. This effect could not be attributed to nongenetic effects such as the possibility that polyandry reduces variance in the quantity or fertilizing ability of sperm females receive, because a control group receiving half the number of copulations showed no drop in hatching success. Offspring did not differ in survival, adult mass, size, or development time with treatment. When males were mated to several different females there were no repeatable differences between individual males in the hatching success of their mate's eggs. This suggests that improved hatching success of polyandrous females is not due to certain males having genes that improve egg viability regardless of their mate. Instead, our results support the hypothesis that certain males are genetically more compatible with certain females, and that this drives polyandry through differential fertilization success of sperm from more compatible males.
尽管一妻多夫制对性选择很重要,但雌性频繁与多个雄性交配的原因仍知之甚少。基于这样的观点,即通过与多个配偶交配,雌性增加了其后代由基因更匹配或更优越的雄性所生的可能性,人们提出了一些遗传益处。如果某些雄性具有内在的“好基因”,那么与它们交配的任何雌性都会产生更优越的后代。或者,如果某些雄性具有与特定雌性不兼容的基因元素,那么如果这些雄性的精子使她的卵子受精的可能性较小,她可能会从一妻多夫制中受益。我们在双斑蟋(直翅目:蟋蟀科)中检验了这些假设。通过给雌性分配相同数量的交配次数但不同数量的配偶,我们研究了配偶数量对雌性繁殖力以及后代短期和长期适应性的影响。这表明配偶数量对产卵数量没有影响。然而,卵的孵化成功率随着配偶数量的增加而提高。这种影响不能归因于非遗传效应,例如一妻多夫制可能会降低雌性所接受精子的数量或受精能力的差异,因为接受一半交配次数的对照组孵化成功率没有下降。不同处理组的后代在存活率、成虫质量、大小或发育时间上没有差异。当雄性与几个不同的雌性交配时,其配偶的卵的孵化成功率在个体雄性之间没有可重复的差异。这表明一妻多夫制雌性孵化成功率的提高不是因为某些雄性具有无论配偶如何都能提高卵活力的基因。相反,我们的结果支持这样的假设,即某些雄性与某些雌性在基因上更兼容,并且这通过更兼容雄性的精子受精成功率差异驱动了一妻多夫制。