Sexual selection can both increase and decrease extinction probability: reconciling demographic and evolutionary factors
Authored by Carlos Martinez-Ruiz, Robert J Knell
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.12601
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/store/10.1111/1365-2656.12601/asset/supinfo/jane12601-sup-0001-AppendixS1-S2.docx?v=1&s=e4060bd7646199f7be5871a9e97eb8f4e488ab5a
Abstract
1. Previous theoretical models of the effect of sexual selection on
average individual fitness in a population have mostly predicted that
sexually selected populations should adapt faster and clear deleterious
mutations more quickly than populations where sexual selection is not
operating.
2. While some laboratory studies have supported these predictions, others have not and studies of field systems have tended to find
negative effects of sexual selection, or no effect. The negative effects
of sexual selection found in field and other studies are usually
ascribed to the costs associated with strong sexual selection acting on
the population.
3. Here, using an individual-based model that allows feedback between
demographic and evolutionary processes, we find that sexual selection
can lead to both increases and decreases in population-level fitness
measures such as extinction probability and adaptation rate. Whether
fitness increases or decreases depends on a variety of environmental and
demographic factors including the nature of environmental change, the
carrying capacity of the environment, the average fecundity of the
population in question and the strength of condition dependence.
4. In many cases, our model predicts that sexual selection leads to
higher extinction probability in small populations because of an
increased risk of demographic stochasticity, but lower extinction
probability in larger populations because of faster adaptation rates.
This is consistent with field studies that have mostly focussed on very
small populations such as recently introduced birds, and tend to find
negative effects, and also with laboratory studies that tend to use
larger populations and have tended to find positive effects.
5. These findings go at least some way towards an understanding of the
apparent contradictions between theoretical predictions, laboratory
studies and field data.
Tags
Individual-based model
Adaptation
Climate change
Evolution
Diversity
sexual selection
conflict
Risk
population
preferences
Mate Choice
Extinction
Genetic-variation
Red deer
Lek paradox
Environmental change