生物
分类交配
择偶
交配
性别选择
进化生物学
生殖隔离
寄主(生物学)
交配偏好
表型可塑性
遗传变异
生态物种形成
数量遗传学
遗传算法
生态学
遗传学
人口
基因流
基因
人口学
社会学
作者
Darren Rebar,Rafael L. Rodrı́guez
出处
期刊:Evolution
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2015-01-22
卷期号:69 (3): 602-610
被引量:25
摘要
Sexual selection acting on small initial differences in mating signals and mate preferences can enhance signal-preference codivergence and reproductive isolation during speciation. However, the origin of initial differences in sexual traits remains unclear. We asked whether biotic environments, a source of variation in sexual traits, may provide a general solution to this problem. Specifically, we asked whether genetic variation in biotic environments provided by host plants can result in signal-preference phenotypic covariance in a host-specific, plant-feeding insect. We used a member of the Enchenopa binotata species complex of treehoppers (Hemiptera: Membracidae) to assess patterns of variation in male mating signals and female mate preferences induced by genetic variation in host plants. We employed a novel implementation of a quantitative genetics method, rearing field-collected treehoppers on a sample of naturally occurring replicated host plant clone lines. We found remarkably high signal-preference covariance among host plant genotypes. Thus, genetic variation in biotic environments influences the sexual phenotypes of organisms living on those environments in a way that promotes assortative mating among environments. This consequence arises from conditions likely to be common in nature (phenotypic plasticity and variation in biotic environments). It therefore offers a general answer to how divergent sexual selection may begin.
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