A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Constrained evolution of the sex comb in Drosophila simulans




AuthorsMaraqa MS, Griffin R, Sharma MD, Wilson AJ, Hunt J, Hosken DJ, House CM

PublisherWILEY

Publication year2017

JournalJournal of Evolutionary Biology

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY

Journal acronymJ EVOLUTION BIOL

Volume30

Issue2

First page 388

Last page400

Number of pages13

ISSN1010-061X

eISSN1420-9101

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/jeb.13015

Web address http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jeb.13015/epdf

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/20568788


Abstract
Male fitness is dependent on sexual traits that influence mate acquisition (precopulatory sexual selection) and paternity (post-copulatory sexual selection), and although many studies have documented the form of selection in one or the other of these arenas, fewer have done it for both. Nonetheless, it appears that the dominant form of sexual selection is directional, although theoretically, populations should converge on peaks in the fitness surface, where selection is stabilizing. Many factors, however, can prevent populations from reaching adaptive peaks. Genetic constraints can be important if they prevent the development of highest fitness phenotypes, as can the direction of selection if it reverses across episodes of selection. In this study, we examine the evidence that these processes influence the evolution of the multivariate sex comb morphology of male Drosophila simulans. To do this, we conduct a quantitative genetic study together with a multivariate selection analysis to infer how the genetic architecture and selection interact. We find abundant genetic variance and covariance in elements of the sex comb. However, there was little evidence for directional selection in either arena. Significant nonlinear selection was detected prior to copulation when males were mated to nonvirgin females, and post-copulation during sperm offence (again with males mated to nonvirgins). Thus, contrary to our predictions, the evolution of the D.simulans sex comb is limited neither by genetic constraints nor by antagonistic selection between pre- and post-copulatory arenas, but nonlinear selection on the multivariate phenotype may prevent sex combs from evolving to reach some fitness maximizing optima.

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