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Fitness differences suppress the number of mating types in evolving isogamous species. | LitMetric

Fitness differences suppress the number of mating types in evolving isogamous species.

R Soc Open Sci

Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, UK.

Published: February 2020

Sexual reproduction is not always synonymous with the existence of two morphologically different sexes; isogamous species produce sex cells of equal size, typically falling into multiple distinct self-incompatible classes, termed mating types. A long-standing open question in evolutionary biology is: what governs the number of these mating types across species? Simple theoretical arguments imply an advantage to rare types, suggesting the number of types should grow consistently; however, empirical observations are very different. While some isogamous species exhibit thousands of mating types, such species are exceedingly rare, and most have fewer than 10. In this paper, we present a mathematical analysis to quantify the role of fitness variation-characterized by different mortality rates-in determining the number of mating types emerging in simple evolutionary models. We predict that the number of mating types decreases as the variance of mortality increases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7062084PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.192126DOI Listing

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