Zusammenfassung der Ressource
THE EVO OF BREEDING SYSTEM
- ALTERNATIVE TO SEXUAL
REPRODUCTION
- asexual reproduction
- apomixis (apomictic
parthenogenesis)
Anmerkungen:
- production of ovum via mitosis --> development of unfertilised ovum--> genetically identical daughters--> lineage of genetically identical females
- COSTS?
- (1) cost of producing males if all else
is equal, parthenogenetic lineages
have double the fecundity of sexual
lineages
Anmerkungen:
- ONLY FEMALES ARE RELATED TO FECUNDITY CZ THEY PRODUCE EGGS
asexual - generation t + 3 (64 direct descendants)
sexual (t + 3) - 16 direct descendants (produce eggs)
- (2) cost of recombination
(breakdown of successful
genotypes)
- DISTRIBUTION OF SEXUAL
VS ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION
- 1) the vast majority (~98%) of plant
and animal species utilise sexual
reproduction
- 2) asexuals have sporadic taxonomic
distributions,(e.g. absent in mammals &
birds, rare in reptiles & fish, common in
ostracods & nematodes)
Anmerkungen:
- • there are barriers to the evolution of asexuality in some taxa
• in other taxa, asexual reproduction is possible
- 3) asexuals generally have close sexual
relatives (e.g. genera of freshwater ostracods
sex only = ~45% asex only = ~5% sex +
asex = ~50%)
Anmerkungen:
- bulk of asexuals have arisen relatively recently
(generally believed to have limited evolutionary
potential)
- 4) asexuals can be successful on
ecological time-scales
Anmerkungen:
- e.g. ostracod, Candonocypris novaezelandiae
widespread in southern Australia;
includes sexual and parthenogenetic lineages;
sexual lineages = known only from 2 places
asexual lineages = ‘everywhere’
- 5) some species have life-cycles that include
both sexual and asexual reproduction
(heterogonic life-cycles)
Anmerkungen:
- e.g. cyclical parthenogenetic
cladocerans, rotifers, aphids
- ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE OF
SEXUAL REPRODUCTION
- DEFINING FEATURES
- involving the production
and fusion of a male and
female gamete
- genetic
re-organisation
- two individuals
- production of genetically
diverse male and female
offspring
- Q. What are Co-adapted
Gene Complexes?
- A. combination of alleles at multiple genes
which have high fitness when they occur
together (many phenotypic traits are
controlled by multiple genes acting in
concert)
Anmerkungen:
- e.g. mimicry of Papilio memnon- recombination of genes breaks down the mimicry
- Q. What does Sexual
Reproduction do to
Co-adapted Gene
Complexes?
- A. reorganises successful
combinations of alleles and generates
offspring with untried combinations
- What is the Adaptive
Significance of Sexual
Reproduction?
Anmerkungen:
- - sexual reproduction is common, yet sexually reproducing individuals incur a
significant cost (paradox of sexual
reproduction)
- implies there must be an advantage(s) to balance the costs
- EXPLANATION 1.
Sex accelerates
evolution
- hypothesis that argues sexual
populations have an advantage
over asexual ones because they
evolve faster
- group selectionist argument - sex
benefits populations or species
(consequences for individuals are
irrelevant)
- HOW?
Anmerkungen:
- increase the rate at which beneficial mutations can be combined in single individuals (A1B1-A2B2) --> sexual populations are able to adapt more rapidly --> less likely to become extinct, particularly in changing environments
- PROBLEMS
- 1) does sexual reproduction
actually accelerate evolution?
(Non-synchronous Mutations)
Anmerkungen:
- * only if favourable mutations arise relatively
frequently (otherwise each beneficial
mutation will become fixed before the next
one arises)
this is unlikely except in very large
populations
- 2) can group selection
override individual selection?
Anmerkungen:
- i.e., can traits that benefit a group
persist even if they are
disadvantageous to individuals?
- What is Group Selection? -
selection operating on groups
Anmerkungen:
- differential rate of origination/extinction of
groups on the basis of differences among
them
- Q. What if certain characteristics
are beneficial both to groups and
the individuals that comprise
them?
- A. expect such characteristics to prosper
- EXPLANATION 2.
Muller’s Ratchet
- hypothesis that argues asexual
lineages are ultimately driven to
extinction by the accumulation of
deleterious mutations
- BASIS
- # of deleterious
mutations (mutational load) in an
asexual lineage can only increase
through time
Anmerkungen:
- in asexual - can't recreate the normal gene back - no recombination
eventually the clone with the least
mutations will be lost (via drift) and so on
- ultimately leads to a
‘mutational meltdown’
- in contrast, sexual reproduction can
generate the least mutation-laden
genotype classes and so lighten the
mutational load and hence lower
extinction rates
- PROBLEMS (assumes)
- mutations are typically
deleterious and back
mutation is relatively rare
(usually true)
- group selection (dubious)
- small population size
(sometimes true)
- SUMMARY
- the advantages of
sexual reproduction -
focusing on the
disadvantages of
asexual reproduction
- EXPLANATION 3.
The Best Man
Hypothesis
- hypothesis that argues that sexually
reproducing individuals have an advantage
because they can produce a few progeny
with extraordinarily high fitness
- Basis
- sexual progeny ⇒ lower
average but greater variance
in fitness
- consequently a few sexual
progeny may have
extraordinarily high fitness
- more likely if the
environment changes from
one generation to the next
- PROBLEMS
- assumes high fecundity
organisms & strong
selection
- emphasis on fine-tuned
adaptation to the physical
environment
Anmerkungen:
- tight link btwn adaptation and phenotype and physical env
- theoretical models indicate that
environmental change must be
capricious to provide a sufficient
advantage
Anmerkungen:
- Capricious is where the sign of the correlation between two adaptively important features is negative
e.g.
generation t = hot & dry or cold & wet
generation t+1 = hot & wet or cold & dry
- SUMMARY
- generally discounted as a
specific explanation of sexual
reproduction
- focussed attention on the type of
environmental change that might
favour sexual reproduction
- one of the first
explanations based on
individual advantage
- EXPLANATION 4.
The Red Queen
Hypothesis
- hypothesis that argues sexual
reproduction provides organisms with the
means to constantly improve in order to
keep pace with their antagonists
- BASIS
- concerns the biotic
environment (predators,
competitors, pathogens –
anatogists)
- any ‘improvement’ in these
antagonists represents a
deterioration in the environment
of an organism
- thus organisms need to constantly
improve in order to simply keep
pace with their antagonists
- EARLY VERSION
- emphasized predator-prey
interactions and fine-tuned
adaptation
Anmerkungen:
- fine-tuned adaptation - matching the phenotype to the circumstances (env) that particular phenotype carries on
- predators and prey - have
comparable generation
times --> evolve on similar
time-scales
- the advantage is not clear
- CURRENT VERSION
- emphasizes
host-pathogen
co-evolution
- pathogens typically have
much shorter generation
times than their hosts
- pathogens are under selection
to infect hosts and hosts are
under selection to evade
pathogens
- pathogens that infect the
most common host
genotype will be selected for
- if the pathogen can improve its attack
much faster than the host can improve its
defence, then the best strategy for the
host may be based on genotypic diversity
- emphasis on generating
genetic novelty per se (rather
than fine-tuned adaptation) as a
defence against pathogens
- UNDERLYING ASSUMPTIONS
- 1. parasites/pathogens reduce the
fitness of the hosts that they infect
- e.g. Egypt- human population
- 2. sexual individuals should be favoured
when the risk of infection is high
- e.g.
Potamopyrgus
antipodarum
Anmerkungen:
- • includes sexual and
asexual lines that co-occur
in some habitats
* aside from the mode of
reproduction, sexual and
asexual females appear to
have similar life-histories
- total infections by trematodes vs freq of males (high infection, high males)- high sexual reproduction
- no trematodes - asexual occurs
- 3. parasite/host interactions are
based on STRONG GENOTYPE X
GENOTYPE INTERACTION
Anmerkungen:
- genetic control whether you can affect or resist or not
- e.g. Interactions Between
a Rust Parasite & its Flax
Host
Anmerkungen:
- genetic control
some type of rust can affect some variety of flax. some cannot.
- 4. parasite/host interactions
generate negative frequency
dependent selection
- e.g. Incidence of Fish
Predation on Three Colour
Forms of a Corixid Bug
Anmerkungen:
- if survive earlier- selected, grow larger population- become more common- get selected as prey more often (selection pressure) - decline in popn
- SUMMARY
- predominant explanations of the
adaptive significance of sexual
reproduction
- CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS
- sexual reproduction can generate
genotypic diversity only in
genetically variable populations
Anmerkungen:
- cannot generate genotypic diversity unless there is genetic polymorphism
- if sexual reproduction/genotypic
diversity is an important defence
against parasites/ pathogens ⇒
maintenance of genotypic diversity is
important
- small population size ⇒ loss
of genetic variation