Authors
Alyson J Lumley, Łukasz Michalczyk, James JN Kitson, Lewis G Spurgin, Catriona A Morrison, Joanne L Godwin, Matthew E Dickinson, Oliver Y Martin, Brent C Emerson, Tracey Chapman, Matthew JG Gage
Publication date
2015/6/25
Journal
Nature
Volume
522
Issue
7557
Pages
470-473
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Reproduction through sex carries substantial costs, mainly because only half of sexual adults produce offspring. It has been theorized that these costs could be countered if sex allows sexual selection to clear the universal fitness constraint of mutation load,,. Under sexual selection, competition between (usually) males and mate choice by (usually) females create important intraspecific filters for reproductive success, so that only a subset of males gains paternity. If reproductive success under sexual selection is dependent on individual condition, which is contingent to mutation load, then sexually selected filtering through ‘genic capture’ could offset the costs of sex because it provides genetic benefits to populations. Here we test this theory experimentally by comparing whether populations with histories of strong versus weak sexual selection purge mutation load and resist extinction differently. After evolving replicate …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AJ Lumley, Ł Michalczyk, JJN Kitson, LG Spurgin… - Nature, 2015