lecture 15 Flashcards

1
Q

Diversity of modes of sexual reproduction in (multicellular) eukaryotes

A
  • Anisogamy: sexual reproduction involving fusion of two ‘different’ gametes
  • larger gamete (female egg) & smaller gamete (male sperm)
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2
Q

dioecious

A

Organisms with individuals with separate sexes

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3
Q

Organisms with individuals that can produce both male and female gametes

A

Some species have mixtures of individuals that produce both gametes and individuals that produce only one type of gamete (androdioecy: only produce one or gynodioecy: some can produce both, some can produce one )

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4
Q

Organisms with individuals that can change sex

A

Bluehead wrasse (Protogynous)
- female-> male
- first produce eggs and then one female turns male and produces sperm (once previous sperm producing male dies)

Clownfish (Protandrous)
- male-> female

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5
Q

Sexual selection

A
  • “selection caused by competition for mates among individuals of the same sex”
    Evolution, Futuyma & Kirkpatrick
  • framework for understanding evolution and incredible diversity of reproductive modes, mating systems, and traits related to reproduction (e.g. ornaments, weapons, mating displays)
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6
Q

Sexual selection is driven by what

A

differences in reproductive biology
fundamental differences between small and large gametes

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7
Q

Bateman’s principle: Individuals that produce many small gametes (usually males & sperm)…

A

can often fertilize eggs from many different individuals = selection for traits to increase mating success

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8
Q

Bateman’s principle: Individuals that produce fewer large gametes (usually females & eggs)…

A

can often fertilize eggs with a single mating
no selection for traits to increase mating success

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9
Q

Some predictions of Bateman’s principle:

A
  • with repeated matings, male fitness often increases
    more than female fitness
  • males often have greater variance in reproductive success than females (and greater opportunity for sexual selection)
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10
Q

exceptions and departures of Bateman’s principle:

A
  • females often mate multiply
    -> not mating as many times as males
  • sex role reversals
    -> females may be competing to mate with males
    -> pregnant male seahorse
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11
Q

Variation in mating success in elephant seals

A

Distribution is very different when comparing males and females
* So in males fewer than 10% of the males sired nearly all of the pups
- one single male was responsible for producing 80% of the pups and most of them didn’t produce any

  • In females more than half of the
    females successfully weaned at least one offspring
    • the one that had the most number of babies had 10
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12
Q

Two Major Modes of Sexual Selection

A
  • Male-male competition
  • Female choice
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13
Q

Sexual selection via male-male competition

A
  • “scramble” – traits involved in early search and swift location of mates
  • “contests and displays” - e.g. size, strength, threat signals, weaponry
  • sperm competition: sperm being able to displace other sperm
  • infanticide
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14
Q

Alternative male mating strategies

A

???
* 3 genetically determined male morphs in the marine isopod (crustacean) Paracerceis sculta: large 𝛂 guards, medium-sized 𝛃 mimics females, small 𝛄 sneaks (reproductive success of the 3 males are basically the same)
- so they’re all producing sperm and fertilizing females but with very different strategies

  1. large 𝛂
    - large
    - will guard territories where different numbers of females will accumulate
  2. medium-sized 𝛃
    - mimics females
  3. small 𝛄
    - sneak into the harem and escape detection and aggressive interactions from that alpha male
  • many other examples (& can be due to genetics or condition)
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15
Q

Sexual selection via female mate choice examples

A
  1. peacock
  2. stalk-eyed fly
    very long eyes- proxy for size
    - important for male competition
    - females will mate with males with longer eyes
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16
Q

Direct benefits

A

a potential mate may offer food or other resources (a territory, parental care)

17
Q

Indirect benefits

A

a potential mate may offer “better genes” (as indicated by larger size, brighter colours, or other signals of vigour and good condition)