Heisler I L
Heredity (Edinb). 1985 Oct;55 ( Pt 2):187-98. doi: 10.1038/hdy.1985.91.
Multivariate, quantitative genetic models are developed for the evolution of female mating preferences in situations where males contribute only their gametes to their progeny. Although female mating preferences may not be directly subject to selection, they can evolve via genetic correlations with other characters that are undergoing evolutionary change. The first set of models examines the evolutionary origin of mating preferences directed at one or more traits that may or may not be expressed only in males. When several selected characters possess additive genetic variance, an indirect selective force exists for the evolution of multivariate mating preferences. The magnitude of this force is proportional to the covariance between a female's relative preference for a given male's phenotype and the expected viability of his progeny. The contribution of any single character to this covariance determines its potential value as a mate choice criterion. The pattern of genetic and phenotypic covariation may cause selectively unimportant traits to be useful in mate choice. In the extreme, selectively neutral characters may become the objects of mating preferences, if they are relatively immune to random environmental variation and genetically correlated with selectively important characters. The second set of models examines the dynamic evolution of such a selectively neutral ("arbitrary") character that is both the object of a mating preference and genetically correlated with a third trait that affects viability. The outcome of evolution in this three character system is highly indeterminate. As in other sexual selection models, there exists a line of neutral equilibria wherein the mean of the criterion character matches the mean level of mating preference within the population, while the viability trait equilibrates at the phenotypic value conferring maximum viability. This line of equilibria, however, is not likely to be stable unless females choose mates according to absolute mating preferences. Thus, mating preferences that initially may arise as a mean of increasing offspring viability may nevertheless lead to indeterminate and potentially maladaptive evolutionary outcomes.
在雄性仅为后代贡献配子的情况下,针对雌性交配偏好的进化建立了多变量定量遗传模型。尽管雌性交配偏好可能不会直接受到选择,但它们可以通过与其他正在经历进化变化的性状的遗传相关性而进化。第一组模型研究针对一个或多个可能仅在雄性中表达或可能不在雄性中表达的性状的交配偏好的进化起源。当几个被选择的性状具有加性遗传方差时,就存在一种间接选择力促使多变量交配偏好的进化。这种力的大小与雌性对给定雄性表型的相对偏好与其后代预期生存力之间的协方差成正比。任何单个性状对这种协方差的贡献决定了其作为配偶选择标准的潜在价值。遗传和表型协变模式可能导致在选择上不重要的性状在配偶选择中有用。在极端情况下,如果选择性中性性状相对不受随机环境变化影响且与选择上重要的性状存在遗传相关性,那么它们可能会成为交配偏好的对象。第二组模型研究这样一个选择性中性(“任意”)性状的动态进化,该性状既是交配偏好的对象,又与影响生存力的第三个性状存在遗传相关性。在这个三性状系统中的进化结果具有高度不确定性。与其他性选择模型一样,存在一条中性平衡线,其中标准性状的均值与种群内交配偏好的平均水平相匹配,而生存力性状在赋予最大生存力的表型值处达到平衡。然而,除非雌性根据绝对交配偏好选择配偶,否则这条平衡线不太可能稳定。因此,最初可能作为提高后代生存力手段出现的交配偏好,仍可能导致不确定且潜在适应不良的进化结果。