Male harm suppresses female fitness, affecting the dynamics of adaptation and evolutionary rescue.

IF 3.4 1区 生物学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY Evolution Letters Pub Date : 2023-01-31 eCollection Date: 2024-02-01 DOI:10.1093/evlett/qrac002
Miguel Gómez-Llano, Gonçalo S Faria, Roberto García-Roa, Daniel W A Noble, Pau Carazo
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Abstract

One of the most pressing questions we face as biologists is to understand how climate change will affect the evolutionary dynamics of natural populations and how these dynamics will in turn affect population recovery. Increasing evidence shows that sexual selection favors population viability and local adaptation. However, sexual selection can also foster sexual conflict and drive the evolution of male harm to females. Male harm is extraordinarily widespread and has the potential to suppress female fitness and compromise population growth, yet we currently ignore its net effects across taxa or its influence on local adaptation and evolutionary rescue. We conducted a comparative meta-analysis to quantify the impact of male harm on female fitness and found an overall negative effect of male harm on female fitness. Negative effects seem to depend on proxies of sexual selection, increasing inversely to the female relative size and in species with strong sperm competition. We then developed theoretical models to explore how male harm affects adaptation and evolutionary rescue. We show that, when sexual conflict depends on local adaptation, population decline is reduced, but at the cost of slowing down genetic adaptation. This trade-off suggests that eco-evolutionary feedback on sexual conflict can act like a double-edged sword, reducing extinction risk by buffering the demographic costs of climate change, but delaying genetic adaptation. However, variation in the mating system and male harm type can mitigate this trade-off. Our work shows that male harm has widespread negative effects on female fitness and productivity, identifies potential mechanistic factors underlying variability in such costs across taxa, and underscores how acknowledging the condition-dependence of male harm may be important to understand the demographic and evolutionary processes that impact how species adapt to environmental change.

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雄性的伤害会抑制雌性的健康,影响适应和进化拯救的动态。
作为生物学家,我们面临的最紧迫的问题之一是了解气候变化将如何影响自然种群的进化动态,以及这些动态又将如何反过来影响种群的恢复。越来越多的证据表明,性选择有利于种群的生存和局部适应。然而,性选择也会助长性冲突,推动雄性伤害雌性的进化。雄性对雌性的伤害异常普遍,有可能抑制雌性的适应性并损害种群增长,但我们目前却忽视了它在不同类群中的净效应,也忽视了它对局部适应和进化拯救的影响。我们进行了一项比较荟萃分析,以量化雄性伤害对雌性适应性的影响,结果发现雄性伤害对雌性适应性总体上有负面影响。负面影响似乎取决于性选择的代用指标,与雌性相对大小成反比增加,在精子竞争激烈的物种中也是如此。然后,我们建立了理论模型来探讨雄性伤害如何影响适应和进化拯救。我们发现,当性冲突依赖于局部适应时,种群数量的下降会减少,但代价是遗传适应的减缓。这种权衡表明,生态进化对性冲突的反馈可以像一把双刃剑,通过缓冲气候变化的人口成本来降低灭绝风险,但却会延迟基因适应。然而,交配系统和雄性伤害类型的变化可以减轻这种权衡。我们的研究表明,雄性伤害对雌性的适应性和生产力具有广泛的负面影响,确定了不同类群之间这种成本差异的潜在机制因素,并强调了承认雄性伤害的条件依赖性对于理解影响物种如何适应环境变化的人口和进化过程的重要性。
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来源期刊
Evolution Letters
Evolution Letters EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY-
CiteScore
13.00
自引率
2.00%
发文量
35
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Evolution Letters publishes cutting-edge new research in all areas of Evolutionary Biology. Available exclusively online, and entirely open access, Evolution Letters consists of Letters - original pieces of research which form the bulk of papers - and Comments and Opinion - a forum for highlighting timely new research ideas for the evolutionary community.
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