Genetic basis for traits in populations evolving under increased levels of sexual conflict
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
IISER Mohali
Abstract
Sexual selection drives the evolution of sexually-advantageous traits in both the sexes.
However, in species with promiscuous mating systems such as Drosophila melanogaster, traits
conferring fitness benefits on one sex often come at a cost of fitness of the opposite sex.
Interlocus conflict arising out of such sexual antagonism can manifest as mate harm ability of
males, which is thought to be a pleiotropic consequence of male competitive ability, while
resistance to mate harm is thought to evolve in response this selection pressure in females. On
the other hand, intralocus sexual conflict is a consequence of sex-specific fitness optima for
traits that are common to both males and females like spontaneous locomotor activity. We set
up reciprocal crosses between lab-established M (male-biased sex ratio; stronger sexual
selection) and F (female-biased sex ratio; weaker sexual selection) populations to examine the
genetic background of traits evolving under increased levels of sexual conflict. Contrary to
earlier results, our experiments did not show consistent statistically significant differences
between M and F populations. We discuss these surprising findings in the context of genetic
drift in long-term (>280 generations) experimental evolution projects, as well as the effects of
relaxation of selection pressure on costly sexual traits.