Title: Consequences of population structure for sex allocation and sexual conflict

Archive ouverte

Rodrigues, Leonor, R | Torralba Sáez, Mario | Alpedrinha, João | Lefèvre, Sophie | Brengues, Muriel | Magalhães, Sara | Duncan, Alison

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. Both sex allocation and sexual conflict can be modulated by spatial structure. However, how the interplay between the type of dispersal and the scale of competition simultaneously affects these traits in subdivided populations is rarely considered. We investigated sex allocation and sexual conflict evolution in meta-populations of the spider mite Tetranychus urticae evolving under budding (pairing females from the same patch) or random (pairing females from different patches) dispersal and either local (fixed sampling from each subpopulation) or global (sampling as a function of subpopulation productivity) competition. Females evolving under budding dispersal produced less female-biased offspring sex ratios than those from the random dispersal selection regimes, contradicting theoretical predictions. In contrast, the scale of competition did not strongly affect sex allocation. Offspring sex ratio and female fecundity were unaffected by the number of mates, but female fecundity was highest when their mates evolved under budding dispersal, suggesting these males inflict less harm than those evolving under random dispersal. This work highlights that population structure can impact the evolution of sex allocation and sexual conflict. Moreover, selection on either trait may reciprocally affect the evolution of the other, for example via effects on fecundity.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

No evidence for the evolution of mating behavior in spider mites due to Wolbachia ‐induced cytoplasmic incompatibility

Archive ouverte | Rodrigues, Leonor, R | CCSD

International audience. Arthropods are often infected with Wolbachia inducing cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), whereby crosses between uninfected females and infected males yield unviable fertilized offspring. Alth...

Coinfection accelerates transmission to new hosts despite no effects on virulence and parasite growth

Archive ouverte | Godinho, Diogo, P | CCSD

International audience. One of the fundamental aims of ecological, epidemiological and evolutionary studies of host–parasite interactions is to unravel which factors affect parasite virulence. Theory predicts that v...

Limited host availability disrupts the genetic correlation between virulence and transmission

Archive ouverte | Godinho, Diogo, P | CCSD

International audience. Virulence is expected to be linked to parasite fitness via transmission. However, it is not clear whether this relationship is genetically determined, nor if it differs when transmission occu...

Chargement des enrichissements...