Sex! Flashcards

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1
Q

Why are males costly?

A
  • Cost 50% of female reproductive output
  • Asexual females leave more offspring
  • Males have high levels of competivity
  • Cost of finding a partner
  • Loss of genes each generation
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2
Q

Define sex

A
  • Meiotic sex is usually the fusion of haploid gametes to form a diploid cell in offspring
  • Bacterial sex involves the mixing of genetic material
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3
Q

Give an example of an asexual organism that still relies on sex

A

Poecilia formosa (fish)

  • all-female species
  • mates with males of other species to instigate parthenogenic egg production (doesn’t use sperm, just needed to start development)
  • Males now are evolving discrimination
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4
Q

What other mechanisms can a female eliminate the input of a male?

A

Some asexual species show paternal genome elimination

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5
Q

Why is a lack of genetic variation thought to be ‘bad’?

A
  • Can expose deleterious recessives

- Slow rate of evolution means an inability to track changing environments and pathogens

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6
Q

What did the study of the parthenogenic/sexual snail Pomatopgyrus antipodarum show?

A

Frequency of males depends on

  • Snail density (ability to find a partner)
  • Level of infection (need for genetic diversity)
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7
Q

What is one of the main advantages of sex?

A

Allows independent benificial combinations to be combined much more quickly than in asexuals

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8
Q

Why is sex more common with larger genomes?

A

As deleterious mutation rates are usually more common and sex can be used to avoid these

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9
Q

Why is the flatworm schmidtea polychroa not completely asexual?

A

Sometimes has ‘sneaky’ sex

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10
Q

What are the 3 plant breeding systems?

A
  1. Monoecious - male & females on the same plant
  2. Dioecious - male & females on different plants
  3. Plygamous - both
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11
Q

What is androdiecy?

A

When there are both hemaphrodite plants and male plants in the population (very rare)

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12
Q

What is gynodiecy?

A

When there are both hemaphrodite plants and female plants in the population

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13
Q

What is the genetic model for the evolution of gynodiecy?

A

1 + k >2 (where k is the female advantage)
Essentially females must produce double of the seed of a hemaphrodite in order to succeed
1 + k > 2 (1- ssigma) takes into account inbreeding depression and reduced seed quality

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14
Q

What is the genetic model for the evolution of androdiecy?

A

1 + K >2 (1-ssignma)/(1-s) (where K is male advantage)

This takes into account the preemption of access to ovules in hemaphrodites due to selfing

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15
Q

What selection was found in the plant sagittaria latifolia in monoecious and dioecious populations?

A

Higher rate of selfing in monoecious, however in both populations there was a strong selection against inbred offspring. Both populations also had similar diversities, however both grew in individual clusters

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16
Q

Why is it possible that dioecious plants are less species rich than the rest of the groups?

A

Either a lower speciation or higher extinction rate

- could be as higher genetic diversity is maintained resulting in less divergence

17
Q

Why can sexually dimorphic flowers be detrimental to a dioecious plant species?

A
  • In times of abundant pollinators males are more evolve elaborate floral displays
  • Becomes problematic when there is lower pollinator abundance as they are less likely to visit female flowers