Asymmetric evolutionary responses to sex-specific selection in a hermaphrodite.

Evolution

Centre d'Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive, UMR 5175, CNRS, Université de Montpellier, Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, 1919 Route de Mende, 34293 Montpellier Cedex 05, France.

Published: October 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates sex allocation theory in hermaphroditic snails, focusing on how reduced selection pressures on male or female reproduction affect reproductive traits over 40 generations.
  • Contrary to predictions, results showed no evolutionary trade-offs; instead, relaxing selection on male functions led to decreased juvenile survival and male reproductive success, indicating a potential accumulation of harmful mutations.
  • The findings suggest that sexual selection helps maintain genetic fitness in hermaphrodites by reducing mutation load, similar to what occurs in organisms with separate sexes.

Article Abstract

Sex allocation theory predicts that simultaneous hermaphrodites evolve to an evolutionary stable resource allocation, whereby any increase in investment to male reproduction leads to a disproportionate cost on female reproduction and vice versa. However, empirical evidence for sexual trade-offs in hermaphroditic animals is still limited. Here, we tested how male and female reproductive traits evolved under conditions of reduced selection on either male or female reproduction for 40 generations in a hermaphroditic snail. This selection favors a reinvestment of resources from the sex function under relaxed selection toward the other function. We found no such evolutionary response. Instead, juvenile survival and male reproductive success significantly decreased in lines where selection on the male function (i.e., sexual selection) was relaxed, while relaxing selection on the female function had no effect. Our results suggest that most polymorphisms under selection in these lines were not sex-antagonistic. Rather, they were deleterious mutations affecting juvenile survival (thus reducing both male and female fitness) with strong pleiotropic effects on male success in a sexual selection context. These mutations accumulated when sexual selection was relaxed, which supports the idea that sexual selection in hermaphrodites contributes to purge the mutation load from the genome as in separate-sex organisms.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/evo.13565DOI Listing

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