Author:
Revardel Emmanuelle,Franc Alain,Petit Rémy J
Abstract
Abstract
Background
In heterogeneous environments, sex-biased dispersal could lead to environmental adaptive parental effects, with offspring selected to perform in the same way as the parent dispersing least, because this parent is more likely to be locally adapted. We investigate this hypothesis by simulating varying levels of sex-biased dispersal in a patchy environment. The relative advantage of a strategy involving pure maternal (or paternal) inheritance is then compared with a strategy involving classical biparental inheritance in plants and in animals.
Results
We find that the advantage of the uniparental strategy over the biparental strategy is maximal when dispersal is more strongly sex-biased and when dispersal distances of the least mobile sex are much lower than the size of the environmental patches. In plants, only maternal effects can be selected for, in contrast to animals where the evolution of either paternal or maternal effects can be favoured. Moreover, the conditions for environmental adaptive maternal effects to be selected for are more easily fulfilled in plants than in animals.
Conclusions
The study suggests that sex-biased dispersal can help predict the direction and magnitude of environmental adaptive parental effects. However, this depends on the scale of dispersal relative to that of the environment and on the existence of appropriate mechanisms of transmission of environmentally induced traits.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference67 articles.
1. Lenormand T: Gene flow and the limits to natural selection. Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 2002, 17: 183-189. 10.1016/S0169-5347(02)02497-7.
2. Star B, Stoffels RJ, Spencer HG: Evolution of fitnesses and allele frequencies in a population with spatially heterogeneous selection pressures. Genetics. 2007, 177: 1743-1751. 10.1534/genetics.107.079558.
3. Mazer SJ, Gorchov DL: Parental effects on progeny phenotype in plants: Distinguishing genetic and environmental causes. Evolution. 1996, 50: 44-53. 10.2307/2410779.
4. Wade MJ: The evolutionary genetics of maternal effects. Maternal effects as adaptations. Edited by: Mousseau TA, Fox CW. 1998, New York: Oxford University press, 5-21.
5. Roach D, Wulff R: Maternal effects in plants. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 1987, 18: 209-235. 10.1146/annurev.es.18.110187.001233.
Cited by
14 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献