Vellnow N, Marie-Orleach L, Zadesenets K S, Schärer L
Zoological Institute, Evolutionary Biology, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
School of Biology, University of St Andrews, Fife, UK.
J Evol Biol. 2018 Feb;31(2):180-196. doi: 10.1111/jeb.13212. Epub 2017 Nov 30.
Hermaphroditic animals face the fundamental evolutionary optimization problem of allocating their resources to their male vs. female reproductive function (e.g. testes and sperm vs. ovaries and eggs), and this optimal sex allocation can be affected by both pre- and post-copulatory sexual selection. For example, local sperm competition (LSC) - the competition between related sperm for the fertilization of a partner's ova - occurs in small mating groups and can favour a female-biased sex allocation, because, under LSC, investment into sperm production is predicted to show diminishing fitness returns. Here, we test whether higher testis investment increases an individual's paternity success under sperm competition, and whether the strength of this effect diminishes when LSC is stronger, as predicted by sex allocation theory. We created two subsets of individuals of the simultaneously hermaphroditic flatworm Macrostomum lignano - by sampling worms from either the highest or lowest quartile of the testis investment distribution - and estimated their paternity success in group sizes of either three (strong LSC) or eight individuals (weak LSC). Specifically, using transgenic focal individuals expressing a dominant green-fluorescent protein marker, we showed that worms with high testis investment sired 22% more offspring relative to those with low investment, corroborating previous findings in M. lignano and other species. However, the strength of this effect was not significantly modulated by the experienced group size, contrasting theoretical expectations of more strongly diminishing fitness returns under strong LSC. We discuss the possible implications for the evolutionary maintenance of hermaphroditism in M. lignano.
雌雄同体动物面临着将资源分配给雄性和雌性生殖功能(例如睾丸和精子与卵巢和卵子)的基本进化优化问题,而这种最优的性别分配会受到交配前和交配后性选择的影响。例如,局部精子竞争(LSC)——相关精子为使伴侣的卵子受精而进行的竞争——发生在小型交配群体中,并且可能有利于偏向雌性的性别分配,因为在局部精子竞争下,对精子生产的投入预计会显示出适应性回报递减。在这里,我们测试了更高的睾丸投入是否会增加个体在精子竞争中的父权成功率,以及这种效应的强度在局部精子竞争更强时是否会如性别分配理论所预测的那样减弱。我们创建了同时具有雌雄同体特征的扁形虫利氏大口涡虫个体的两个子集——从睾丸投入分布的最高或最低四分位数中抽取蠕虫——并估计它们在三人组(强局部精子竞争)或八人组(弱局部精子竞争)中的父权成功率。具体而言,通过使用表达显性绿色荧光蛋白标记的转基因焦点个体,我们发现睾丸投入高的蠕虫比睾丸投入低的蠕虫多产生了22%的后代,这证实了之前在利氏大口涡虫和其他物种中的发现。然而,这种效应的强度并没有受到所经历的群体大小的显著调节,这与在强局部精子竞争下适应性回报会更强烈递减的理论预期相反。我们讨论了这对利氏大口涡虫雌雄同体现象进化维持的可能影响。