Why do hybrids turn down sex?

Author:

Fyon Frédéric1ORCID,Berbel-Filho Waldir Miron2ORCID,Schlupp Ingo2ORCID,Wild Geoff3ORCID,Úbeda Francisco1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Royal Holloway University of London , Egham , United Kingdom

2. Department of Biology, University of Oklahoma , Norman, OK , United States

3. Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Western Ontario , London, ON , Canada

Abstract

AbstractAsexual reproduction is ancestral in prokaryotes; the switch to sexuality in eukaryotes is one of the major transitions in the history of life. The study of the maintenance of sex in eukaryotes has raised considerable interest for decades and is still one of evolutionary biology’s most prominent question. The observation that many asexual species are of hybrid origin has led some to propose that asexuality in hybrids results from sexual processes being disturbed because of incompatibilities between the two parental species’ genomes. However, in some cases, failure to produce asexual F1s in the lab may indicate that this mechanism is not the only road to asexuality in hybrid species. Here, we present a mathematical model and propose an alternative, adaptive route for the evolution of asexuality from previously sexual hybrids. Under some reproductive alterations, we show that asexuality can evolve to rescue hybrids’ reproduction. Importantly, we highlight that when incompatibilities only affect the fusion of sperm and egg’s genomes, the two traits that characterize asexuality, namely unreduced meiosis and the initiation of embryogenesis without the incorporation of the sperm’s pronucleus, can evolve separately, greatly facilitating the overall evolutionary route. Taken together, our results provide an alternative, potentially complementary explanation for the link between asexuality and hybridization.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference56 articles.

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4. The paradox of obligate sex: The roles of sexual conflict and mate scarcity in transitions to facultative and obligate asexuality;Burke;Journal of Evolutionary Biology,2019

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