Sexual transmission of disease and host mating systems: Within-season reproductive success
Authored by J Antonovics, PH Thrall, JD Bever
Date Published: 1997
DOI: 10.1086/286001
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
While there is an extensive literature on the evolution of mating
systems in animals, little consideration has been given to the possible
evolutionary interactions between sexually transmitted pathogens and the
mating systems of their hosts. We use individual-based models that
incorporate measurable per-contact probabilities of infection and
fertilization to show that not only can the presence of sexually
transmitted (and sterilizing) pathogen have significant effects on
optimal within-season mating strategies for both males and females. We
show that, contrary to expectations, monogamy is not always predicted to
be the optimal strategy. The optimal strategy may also often differ
between the two sexes, and the optimal strategy will not always be the
one that minimizes disease transmission. Similarly, we show that the
optimal level of virulence for a sexually transmitted pathogen is a
function of the degree of promiscuity of its host. Overall, these
results suggest that sexually transmitted diseases can impact host
mating behavior, often in nonintuitive directions.
Tags
behavior
Dynamics
birds
Population-growth
Parasites
Hypotheses
Gonococcal-infection
Transmitted disease
Hiv
infection
Infertility