Is variation in female aggressiveness across Drosophila species associated with reproductive potential?

Eleanor Bath, Jennifer M Gleason
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Abstract

Aggression is a key determinant of fitness in many species, mediating access to mates, food, and breeding sites. Variation in intrasexual aggression across species is likely driven by variation in resource availability and distribution. To date, most studies have focused on male aggression, but female aggression is common and has fitness consequences. While males primarily compete over access to mates, females are likely to compete over resources to maximize offspring quantity and/or quality, such as food or breeding sites. To investigate why reproduction and aggression are often linked, we tested predictions about resource valuation, life-history, and physiological correlates of reproduction. We used machine learning classifiers developed for D. melanogaster to identify and quantify aggressive behaviors displayed in the presence of yeast for mated and unmated females of eight Drosophila species. We found that female aggression was linked to ovariole number across species, suggesting that females that lay more eggs are more aggressive. A need for resources for egg production or oviposition sites or similar physiological mechanisms regulating aggression and reproduction may therefore be drivers of female aggression.
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果蝇物种间雌性攻击性的变化与生殖潜力有关吗?
在许多物种中,攻击性是决定适应性的关键因素,它是获得配偶、食物和繁殖地的媒介。不同物种之间性内攻击的差异很可能是由资源可用性和分布的差异造成的。迄今为止,大多数研究都集中于雄性攻击行为,但雌性攻击行为也很常见,而且会对适应能力产生影响。雄性主要争夺配偶,而雌性则可能争夺资源,以最大限度地提高后代的数量和/或质量,如食物或繁殖地。为了探究为什么繁殖和攻击行为经常联系在一起,我们测试了有关资源评估、生命史和繁殖生理相关性的预测。我们使用为黑腹果蝇开发的机器学习分类器来识别和量化八个果蝇物种的交配和未交配雌性果蝇在酵母存在时表现出的攻击行为。我们发现,在不同物种中,雌果蝇的攻击行为与卵巢数量有关,这表明产卵越多的雌果蝇攻击性越强。因此,对产卵资源或产卵场所的需求或类似的调节攻击性和繁殖的生理机制可能是雌性攻击性的驱动因素。
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