组合交配和配偶选择有助于维持本笃花的发育二型性。

IF 1.8 3区 生物学 Q3 DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY Journal of experimental zoology. Part B, Molecular and developmental evolution Pub Date : 2023-05-09 DOI:10.1002/jez.b.23196
Erika L. Ruskie, Christina Zakas
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引用次数: 1

摘要

当潜在配偶之间的偏好进化时,可能会发生配对交配,即个体在表型或基因型方面非随机交配。当一个群体中出现这种交配偏好时,它会导致进化和表型的差异。但分类交配、择偶偏好和发育在进化上的联系程度尚不清楚。在这里,我们使用具有罕见发育二态性的海洋环节动物Streblospio benedicti来研究配偶选择是否有助于发育进化。对于本笃虫来说,两种类型的生态和表型相似的成虫在自然种群中持续存在,但它们会产生具有不同生活史的截然不同的后代。尽管没有合子后生殖障碍,但这种二型性仍然存在,在这种障碍中,发育类型之间的杂交可以产生表型中间的后代。这种生活史策略是如何进化的尚不清楚,但分类交配是进化分化的典型第一步。在这里,我们调查了雌性择偶是否发生在这个物种中。我们发现,配偶偏好可能有助于维持替代发展和生活史策略。
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Assortative mating and mate-choice contributes to the maintenance of a developmental dimorphism in Streblospio benedicti

Assortative mating, where individuals non-randomly mate with respect to phenotype or genotype, can occur when preferences between potential mates have evolved. When such mate preferences occur in a population it can drive evolutionary and phenotypic divergence. But the extent to which assortative mating, mate preference, and development are evolutionarily linked remains unclear. Here we use Streblospio benedicti, a marine annelid with a rare developmental dimorphism, to investigate if mate-choice could contribute to developmental evolution. For S. benedicti two types of ecologically and phenotypically similar adults persist in natural populations, but they give rise to distinctly different offspring with alternative life-histories. This dimorphism persists despite the absence of post-zygotic reproductive barriers, where crosses between the developmental types can produce phenotypically intermediate offspring. How this life-history strategy evolved remains unknown, but assortative mating is a typical first step in evolutionary divergence. Here we investigate if female mate-choice is occurring in this species. We find that mate preferences could be contributing to the maintenance of alternative developmental and life-history strategies.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
9.10%
发文量
63
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Developmental Evolution is a branch of evolutionary biology that integrates evidence and concepts from developmental biology, phylogenetics, comparative morphology, evolutionary genetics and increasingly also genomics, systems biology as well as synthetic biology to gain an understanding of the structure and evolution of organisms. The Journal of Experimental Zoology -B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution provides a forum where these fields are invited to bring together their insights to further a synthetic understanding of evolution from the molecular through the organismic level. Contributions from all these branches of science are welcome to JEZB. We particularly encourage submissions that apply the tools of genomics, as well as systems and synthetic biology to developmental evolution. At this time the impact of these emerging fields on developmental evolution has not been explored to its fullest extent and for this reason we are eager to foster the relationship of systems and synthetic biology with devo evo.
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