Archer C Ruth, Paniw Maria, Vega-Trejo Regina, Sepil Irem
Institute of Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation Genomics, University of Ulm Albert-Einstein-Allee 11, 89081 Ulm, Germany.
Department of Conservation Biology, Estación Biológica de Doñana (EBD-CSIC), Seville 41001, Spain.
Proc Biol Sci. 2022 Jul 27;289(1979):20221117. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1117.
Life-history strategies are diverse. While understanding this diversity is a fundamental aim of evolutionary biology and biodemography, life-history data for some traits-in particular, age-dependent reproductive investment-are biased towards females. While other authors have highlighted this sex skew, the general scale of this bias has not been quantified and its impact on our understanding of evolutionary ecology has not been discussed. This review summarizes why the sexes can evolve different life-history strategies. The scale of the sex skew is then discussed and its magnitude compared between taxonomic groups, laboratory and field studies, and through time. We discuss the consequences of this sex skew for evolutionary and ecological research. In particular, this sex bias means that we cannot test some core evolutionary theory. Additionally, this skew could obscure or drive trends in data and hinder our ability to develop effective conservation strategies. We finally highlight some ways through which this skew could be addressed to help us better understand broad patterns in life-history strategies.
生活史策略多种多样。虽然理解这种多样性是进化生物学和生物人口学的一个基本目标,但某些性状的生活史数据,尤其是与年龄相关的生殖投入,偏向于雌性。虽然其他作者已经强调了这种性别偏差,但这种偏差的总体程度尚未量化,其对我们理解进化生态学的影响也未得到讨论。本综述总结了两性为何会进化出不同的生活史策略。接着讨论了性别偏差的程度,并比较了不同分类群、实验室和野外研究以及不同时期的偏差幅度。我们讨论了这种性别偏差对进化和生态研究的影响。特别是,这种性别偏差意味着我们无法检验一些核心进化理论。此外,这种偏差可能会掩盖或推动数据中的趋势,并阻碍我们制定有效保护策略的能力。我们最后强调了一些可以解决这种偏差的方法,以帮助我们更好地理解生活史策略中的广泛模式。