Ethology Lab, Cavanilles Institute of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain.
Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Elife. 2023 Apr 27;12:e84759. doi: 10.7554/eLife.84759.
Strong sexual selection frequently leads to sexual conflict and ensuing male harm, whereby males increase their reproductive success at the expense of harming females. Male harm is a widespread evolutionary phenomenon with a strong bearing on population viability. Thus, understanding how it unfolds in the wild is a current priority. Here, we sampled a wild population and studied male harm across the normal range of temperatures under which it reproduces optimally in nature by comparing female lifetime reproductive success and underlying male harm mechanisms under monogamy (i.e. low male competition/harm) vs. polyandry (i.e. high male competition/harm). While females had equal lifetime reproductive success across temperatures under monogamy, polyandry resulted in a maximum decrease of female fitness at 24°C (35%), reducing its impact at both 20°C (22%), and 28°C (10%). Furthermore, female fitness components and pre- (i.e. harassment) and post-copulatory (i.e. ejaculate toxicity) mechanisms of male harm were asymmetrically affected by temperature. At 20°C, male harassment of females was reduced, and polyandry accelerated female actuarial aging. In contrast, the effect of mating on female receptivity (a component of ejaculate toxicity) was affected at 28°C, where the mating costs for females decreased and polyandry mostly resulted in accelerated reproductive aging. We thus show that, across a natural thermal range, sexual conflict processes and their effects on female fitness components are plastic and complex. As a result, the net effect of male harm on overall population viability is likely to be lower than previously surmised. We discuss how such plasticity may affect selection, adaptation and, ultimately, evolutionary rescue under a warming climate.
强烈的性选择经常导致性冲突和随之而来的雄性伤害,雄性通过伤害雌性来提高繁殖成功率。雄性伤害是一种广泛存在的进化现象,对种群生存力有很大的影响。因此,了解它在野外是如何发生的是当前的优先事项。在这里,我们对一个野生种群进行了采样,并通过比较单配制(即低雄性竞争/伤害)和多配制(即高雄性竞争/伤害)下女性一生繁殖成功率和潜在的雄性伤害机制,研究了在其在自然界中最佳繁殖的正常温度范围内的雄性伤害。虽然在单配制下,女性在不同温度下的一生繁殖成功率相等,但多配制导致女性在 24°C(35%)时的适应性最大降低,从而降低了 20°C(22%)和 28°C(10%)时的影响。此外,雌性的适应性组成部分以及雄性伤害的前(即骚扰)和后交配(即精液毒性)机制,受到温度的不对称影响。在 20°C 时,雄性对雌性的骚扰减少,多配制加速了雌性的增龄。相比之下,在 28°C 时,交配对雌性接受性(精液毒性的一个组成部分)的影响,交配成本对雌性降低,多配制主要导致加速生殖衰老。因此,我们表明,在自然温度范围内,性冲突过程及其对雌性适应性组成部分的影响是具有可塑性和复杂性的。因此,雄性伤害对整体种群生存力的净影响可能低于之前的推测。我们讨论了这种可塑性如何在变暖的气候下影响选择、适应以及最终的进化拯救。