Evolution Letters | |
How to make a haploid male | |
Nicholas G. Davies1  Laura Ross2  Andy Gardner3  | |
[1] Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London WC1E 7HT United Kingdom;Institute of Evolutionary Biology University of Edinburgh Edinburgh EH9 3JT United Kingdom;School of Biology University of St Andrews Dyers Brae St Andrews KY16 9TH United Kingdom; | |
关键词: Kin selection; haplodiploidy; inbreeding; male heterogamety; population genetics; sex chromosome; | |
DOI : 10.1002/evl3.107 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
Abstract Haplodiploidy has evolved repeatedly among invertebrates, and appears to be associated with inbreeding. Evolutionary biologists have long debated the possible benefits for females in diplodiploid species to produce haploid sons–beginning their population's transition to haplodiploidy–and whether inbreeding promotes or inhibits this transition. However, little attention has been given to what makes a haploid individual male rather than female, and whether the mechanism of sex determination may modulate the costs and benefits of male haploidy. We remedy this by performing a theoretical analysis of the origin and invasion of male haploidy across the full range of sex‐determination mechanisms and sib‐mating rates. We find that male haploidy is facilitated by three different mechanisms of sex determination–all involving male heterogamety–and impeded by the others. We also find that inbreeding does not pose an obvious evolutionary barrier, on account of a previously neglected sex‐ratio effect whereby the production of haploid sons leads to an abundance of granddaughters that is advantageous in the context of inbreeding. We find empirical support for these predictions in a survey of sex determination and inbreeding across haplodiploids and their sister taxa.
【 授权许可】
Unknown