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Polygamy and purifying selection in birds. | LitMetric

Polygamy and purifying selection in birds.

Evolution

Milner Centre for Evolution, Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Bath, Bath, United Kingdom.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Good genes theories suggest that polygamy helps remove harmful genetic alleles more effectively due to the alignment of sexual and natural selection, unlike runaway selection theories which predict less efficiency in purifying selection for polygamous species.
  • Analysis of data from 150 bird genomes indicates that polygamous birds have significantly fewer harmful genetic variations than monogamous ones, supporting the "good genes" perspective (p = .0005), regardless of population size.
  • While polygamy didn't affect overall genetic diversity, there was a marginally significant impact on genetic variation in female polyandrous species (p = .045); additionally, smaller body size and larger geographic ranges correlated with better purifying selection and greater genetic diversity

Article Abstract

Good genes theories of sexual selection predict that polygamy will be associated with more efficient removal of deleterious alleles (purifying selection), due to the alignment of sexual selection with natural selection. On the other hand, runaway selection theories expect no such alignment of natural and sexual selection, and may instead predict less efficient purifying selection in polygamous species due to higher reproductive variance. In an analysis of polymorphism data extracted from 150-bird genome assemblies, we show that polygamous species carry significantly fewer nonsynonymous polymorphisms, relative to synonymous polymorphisms, than monogamous bird species (p = .0005). We also show that this effect is independent of effective population size, consistent with the alignment of natural selection with sexual selection and "good genes" theories of sexual selection. Further analyses found no impact of polygamy on genetic diversity, while polygamy in females (polyandry) had a marginally significant impact (p = .045). We also recapitulate previous findings that smaller body mass and greater geographic range size are associated with more efficient purifying selection, more intense GC-biased gene conversion, and greater genetic diversity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/evolut/qpac010DOI Listing

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