Sexual Selection Flashcards
Natural Selection
• Differences in phenotype that have consequences for survival and reproductive
success (fitness) are the raw materials for selection
• Adaptations are those features which enhance
relative fitness and thus lead to greater reproductive success
Differential reproduction is critical to natural selection
Sexual selection
Selection arising from differences in mating success.
A component of natural selection that explains
differences in mating success.
Differential Reproduction
• Mate choice
– Does mating happen?
– Fitness of offspring
– # of offspring
• Asexual reproduction
2 basic kinds of reproductive modes
- Copulation
* Spawning
Copulation requires
• Individuals recognize and encounter conspecifics of
the appropriate sex.
• Means of transmitting
gametes.
• Requires time & energy searching for mates.
Number of potential
encounters may be limited, so each copulation potentially limits future choices or opportunities.
Spawning requires…
Coordination of members of a population with respect to timing of spawning.
• Typically prevents extensive
parental care.
• Concentration and density of gametes appropriate to environment. – Part of coordination equation – Gamete mortality high
• Gamete recognition
mechanisms.
Selective “opportunities” depend on life history
Organisms that do not
“personally” encounter their
mate cannot directly select for
certain features.
Organisms that mate with
one partner cannot select
gametes.
(anemones don’t select)
polyandry
Oldest and largest individual is a female; multiple (smaller) males compete for access.
-better guarantee of successful reproduction
-promote competition among males (and among their sperm— more variation
possible!)
-multiple males can procure more resources for the female
polygyny
Oldest and largest individual is a male; he maintains a harem of females all of whom he fertilizes
-males maximize mating opportunities
Sexual selection
Selection arising from competition between or within sexes in a single population.
Demonstration of mate preference violates the
“random mating” tenet of Hardy-Weinberg.
Hardy-Weinberg requirements:
• Random mating
• All offspring have an equal chance of survival and reproduction
If mate choice is based on heritable phenotype, then some offspring will have a greater/lesser chance of reproducing.
Random mating
• There’s an equal chance of
every male/female pair
– NO demonstrable preference for copulators
• NO geographic barriers or clines
• NO advantage in fertilization
– NO demonstrable preference for spawners
Assortative Mating
• Contrast to random (non-assortative) mating
• Positive assortative mating: Preference for similar
phenotype (may lead to inbreeding depression)
• Negative assortative mating: Preference for different
phenotype (may make it hard to maintain species
boundaries
Positive assortative mating
Preference for similar
phenotype (may lead to inbreeding depression)
Negative assortative mating
Preference for different
phenotype (may make it hard to maintain species boundaries)