Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
Department of Integrative Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan.
Evol Anthropol. 2019 May;28(3):114-125. doi: 10.1002/evan.21776. Epub 2019 Apr 6.
Sexually selected infanticide has been the subject of intense empirical and theoretical study for decades; a related phenomenon, male-mediated prenatal loss, has received much less attention in evolutionary studies. Male-mediated prenatal loss occurs when inseminated or pregnant females terminate reproductive effort following exposure to a nonsire male, either through implantation failure or pregnancy termination. Male-mediated prenatal loss encompasses two sub-phenomena: sexually selected feticide and the Bruce effect. In this review, we provide a framework that explains the relationship between feticide and the Bruce effect and describes what is known about the proximate and ultimate mechanisms involved in each. Using a simple model, we demonstrate that male-mediated prenatal loss can provide greater reproductive benefits to males than infanticide. We therefore suggest that, compared to infanticide, male-mediated prenatal loss may be more prevalent in mammalian species and may have played a greater role in their social evolution than has previously been documented.
几十年来,性选择杀婴一直是激烈的实证和理论研究的主题;与之相关的现象,即雄性介导的产前损失,在进化研究中受到的关注要少得多。当受精或怀孕的雌性在暴露于非亲代雄性后,无论是通过着床失败还是妊娠终止,都会终止生殖努力,从而发生雄性介导的产前损失。雄性介导的产前损失包括两个子现象:性选择杀胎和布鲁斯效应。在这篇综述中,我们提供了一个解释杀胎和布鲁斯效应之间关系的框架,并描述了已知的与每个现象相关的近因和终极机制。我们使用一个简单的模型表明,与杀婴相比,雄性介导的产前损失可以为雄性提供更大的繁殖收益。因此,我们认为,与杀婴相比,雄性介导的产前损失在哺乳动物物种中可能更为普遍,并且在其社会进化中可能发挥了比以前记录的更大的作用。