The geography of sex: sexual conflict, environmental gradients and local loss of sex in facultatively parthenogenetic animals
                Authored by Nathan W Burke, Russell Bonduriansky
                
                    Date Published: 2018
                
                
                    DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0422
                
                
                    Sponsors:
                    
                        Australian Research Council (ARC)
                        
                
                
                    Platforms:
                    
                        NetLogo
                        
                
                
                    Model Documentation:
                    
                        Other Narrative
                        
                        Flow charts
                        
                
                
                    Model Code URLs:
                    
                        https://figshare.com/collections/Supplementary_material_from_The_geography_of_sex_sexual_conflict_environmental_gradients_and_local_loss_of_sex_in_facultatively_parthenogenetic_animals_/4181165
                        
                
                Abstract
                Obligately asexual organisms tend to occur at higher altitudes or
latitudes and occupy larger ranges than their obligately sexual
relatives-a phenomenon called geographical parthenogenesis. Some
facultatively parthenogenetic organisms that reproduce both sexually and
asexually also exhibit spatial variation in reproductive mode. Theory
suggests that sexual conflict and mate limitation can determine the
relative frequency of sex in facultative parthenogens, but the effect of
these dynamics on spatial distributions is unknown. Here, we use
individual-based models to investigate whether these dynamics can
generate local differences in the reproductive mode in a facultatively
parthenogenetic metapopulation occupying an environmental gradient. We
find that selection for resistance and high fecundity creates positive
epistasis in virgin females between a mutant allele for parthenogenesis
and alleles for resistance, resulting in female-biased sex ratios and
higher resistance and coercion towards the productive `core' of the
metapopulation. However, steeper environmental gradients, which lead to
lower density and less mating at the `edge', generate female bias
without promoting coercion or resistance. Our analysis shows that local
adaptation of facultatively parthenogenetic populations subject to
sexual conflict and productivity gradients can generate striking spatial
variation suggesting new patterns for empirical investigation. These
findings could also help to explain the rarity of facultative
parthenogenesis in animals.
This article is part of the theme issue `Linking local adaptation with
the evolution of sex differences'.
                
Tags
                
                    Individual-based model
                
                    Adaptation
                
                    Evolution
                
                    Dispersal
                
                    Model
                
                    Sexual conflict
                
                    Maintenance
                
                    invasion
                
                    Transition
                
                    Reproduction
                
                    Drosophila
                
                    Environmental gradient
                
                    Geographical parthenogenesis
                
                    Facultative parthenogenesis
                
                    Paradox of
sex
                
                    Molecular evidence