Multiple paternity is related to adult sex ratio and sex determination system in reptiles

Author:

Pipoly Ivett12ORCID,Duffy Robert3,Mészáros Gábor4,Bókony Veronika5,Vági Balázs6,Székely Tamás63,Liker András12

Affiliation:

1. Behavioral Ecology Research Group, Center for Natural Sciences, Faculty of Engineering University of Pannonia Veszprém Hungary

2. ELKH-PE Evolutionary Ecology Research Group University of Pannonia Veszprém Hungary

3. Milner Centre for Evolution, Department of Biology & Biochemistry University of Bath Bath UK

4. Centre for Ecological Research, Institute of Aquatic Ecology, Department of Tisza Research Conservation Ecology Research Group Debrecen Hungary

5. Department of Evolutionary Ecology Plant Protection Institute, Centre for Agricultural Research, Eötvös Loránd Research Network Budapest Hungary

6. ELKH-DE Reproductive Strategies Research Group, Department of Evolutionary Zoology and Human Biology University of Debrecen Debrecen Hungary

Abstract

Abstract The adult sex ratio (ASR, the proportion of males in the adult population) is an emerging predictor of reproductive behaviour, and recent studies in birds and humans suggest it is a major driver of social mating systems and parental care. ASR may also influence genetic mating systems. For instance male-skewed ASRs are expected to increase the frequency of multiple paternity (defined here as a clutch or litter sired by two or more males) due to higher rates of coercive copulations by males, and/or due to females exploiting the opportunity of copulation with multiple males to increase genetic diversity of their offspring. Here, we evaluate this hypothesis in reptiles that often exhibit high frequency of multiple paternity although its ecological and life-history predictors have remained controversial. Using a comprehensive dataset of 81 species representing all four non-avian reptile orders, we show that increased frequency of multiple paternity is predicted by more male-skewed ASR, and this relationship is robust to simultaneous effects of several life-history predictors. Additionally, we show that the frequency of multiple paternity varies with the sex determination system: species with female heterogamety (ZZ/ZW sex chromosomes) exhibit higher levels of multiple paternity than species with male heterogamety (XY/XX) or temperature-dependent sex determination. Thus, our across-species comparative study provides the first evidence that genetic mating system depends on ASR in reptiles. We call for further investigations to uncover the complex evolutionary associations between mating systems, sex determination systems and ASR. Abstract "Phylogenetic comparative analyses of 81 non-avian reptile species show that the frequency of multiple paternity in clutches is associated with adult sex ratio. Additionally, multiple paternity varies with the sex determination system of the species."

Funder

ÉLVONAL

Nemzeti Kutatási Fejlesztési és Innovációs Hivatal

Royal Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference85 articles.

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