Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia, Aiken, SC.
Daniel B. Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, University of Georgia, Athens, GA.
J Hered. 2018 Oct 31;109(7):791-801. doi: 10.1093/jhered/esy036.
In many vertebrates, body size is an important driver of variation in male reproductive success. Larger, more fit individuals are more likely to dominate mating opportunities, skewing siring success and resulting in lower effective population sizes and genetic diversity. The mating system of the gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus) has been characterized as both female-defense and scramble-competition polygyny. Mating systems are typically not fixed and can be influenced by factors such as population density, demographic structure, and environmental conditions; however, most populations will have a predominant strategy that results from local conditions. We assessed how male body size influences patterns of paternity and reproductive success in a natural population of gopher tortoises in Florida, United States. Using microsatellites, we assigned parentage of 220 hatchlings from 31 nests collected during 2 reproductive seasons. Larger males were significantly more likely to sire offspring and sired more offspring than smaller males; however, the likelihood of a clutch being multiply sired was unrelated to male body size. We also found evidence of mate fidelity across years. Although paternity patterns in this high-density population are more consistent with defense polygyny, female monopoly by males was incomplete, with both large and small males contributing to multiply sired clutches. Additional behavioral data are needed to clarify the role of female mate selection in paternity outcomes. The context-dependence of mating systems underscores the need to compare parentage patterns across populations and to recognize the potential for more than 1 strategy to be employed within a single population.
在许多脊椎动物中,体型是影响雄性繁殖成功的重要因素。更大、更健康的个体更有可能主导交配机会,使受精成功的机会偏向于它们,从而导致有效种群规模和遗传多样性降低。草原龟蜥(Gopherus polyphemus)的交配系统被描述为雌性防御和混战竞争的多配偶制。交配系统通常不是固定的,会受到种群密度、人口结构和环境条件等因素的影响;然而,大多数种群都会因为当地的条件而形成一种主要的策略。我们评估了雄性体型如何影响美国佛罗里达州一个草原龟蜥自然种群的亲权和繁殖成功模式。我们使用微卫星,对在 2 个繁殖季节收集的 31 个巢穴中的 220 只孵化幼龟进行了亲权分配。较大的雄性更有可能成为后代的父亲,并比较小的雄性生育更多的后代;然而,一个卵窝有多只雄性受精的可能性与雄性体型无关。我们还发现了多年来伴侣忠诚的证据。尽管这个高密度种群的亲权模式更符合防御多配偶制,但雄性对雌性的垄断并不完全,大、小雄性都为多只雄性受精的卵窝做出了贡献。需要更多的行为数据来阐明雌性伴侣选择在亲权结果中的作用。交配系统的语境依赖性强调了需要在不同种群中比较亲权模式,并认识到在单个种群中可能采用不止一种策略。