Mating advantage for rare males in wild guppy populations

Nature ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 503 (7474) ◽  
pp. 108-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimberly A. Hughes ◽  
Anne E. Houde ◽  
Anna C. Price ◽  
F. Helen Rodd
Keyword(s):  
Nature ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 267 (5607) ◽  
pp. 151-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
PETER O'DONALD

Genetics ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
pp. 975-993
Author(s):  
Edwin H Bryant ◽  
Aykut Kence ◽  
Kay T Kimball

ABSTRACT Multiple-choice crosses among five geographic strains of the housefly, Musca domestica L., were carried out in equal (10:10) and low-frequency (4:16) ratios. Initially, a low-frequency-male mating advantage was apparent, but further analyses related this minority advantage to a reduction of male mating success during marking by wing clipping. When there are fluctuating differences in the level of sexual vigor between competing male types over replicate trials of a cross, a mating advantage will accrue to the minority type. Even if males from the two competing strains are equally vigorous, such fluctuating differences will occur during sampling of flies. Harming the flies during marking will serve to enhance this effect and make significant departures toward greater mating success of rare males highly likely. This statistical bias in favor of minority males was substantiated in simulations of the Kence-Bryant model of mating success and compared with our results of a minority advantage in the housefly and with published results of a minority advantage in Drosophila. Our evidence, though circumstantial, that an advantage to minority males could have been induced by such an experimental bias suggests that a re-examination of existing data, as well as new experimentation, is necessary to discern whether or not a real rare-male advantage exists.


Genetics ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 107 (4) ◽  
pp. 577-589
Author(s):  
Wyatt W Anderson ◽  
Celeste J Brown

ABSTRACT Recent work has called into question the reality of the rare male mating advantage, pointing out that it could be a statistical artifact of marking flies for behavioral observation or of experimental bias in collecting males. We designed an experiment to test for rare male mating advantage that avoids these sources of bias. Large numbers of males of three Drosophila pseudoobscura karyotypes were allowed to mate with females of one karyotype in population cages. The females were then isolated before multiple mating occurred and their progeny used to diagnose the males that mated them. Populations were studied at five sets of male karyotypic frequencies. The mating success of the male homokaryotypes ST/ST and CH/CH, relative to that of the heterokaryotype ST/CH, was frequency dependent. Both ST/ST and CH/CH males displayed a statistically significant mating advantage at low frequency by comparision with their mating success in the midrange of karyotypic frequencies. Both male homokaryotypes also showed a significantly greater mating success at high homokaryotypic frequency than at intermediate frequencies, which is the same as saying that the heterokaryotype not only failed to show a rare male advantage but actually suffered a mating disadvantage at low frequency. We conclude that rare male mating advantage is not always an experimental or methodological artifact but does occur in laboratory populations of D. pseudoobscura. It may occur for some genotypes and not for others, however, and it may be only one of several forms of frequency-dependent mating behavior operating in a population.


Genetics ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 111 (4) ◽  
pp. 795-804
Author(s):  
Donald A Gailey ◽  
Jeffrey C Hall ◽  
Richard W Siegel

ABSTRACT Male Drosophila melanogaster that have courted newly-emerged males can modify their subsequent courtship behavior to avoid further courtship with immature males for up to 6 hr (previously reported). Here, it was hypothesized that such an experience-dependent modification would afford a mating advantage to normal males over males that carried a mutation that affects learning and memory. Coisogenic lines were constructed which varied at the dunce gene (dnc  + and dnc  M14 alleles) in order to test this hypothesis. Whether previously experienced with immature males or not, dnc  + and dnc  M14 males were indistinguishable in their response and mating efficiency when individually paired with virgin females. However, courtship performance of dnc  + and dnc  M14 males was different if they were first experienced with immature males and were then individually tested in an artificial population of nine immature males and one virgin female. In this situation, dnc  + males spent much less time in courtship with immature males and achieved copulation in one-third the time required for dnc  M14 males. As a control, the behavior and mating efficiency of courtship-naive dnc  + and dnc  M14 males in the artificial population was indistinguishable. In competition for a single virgin female, experienced dnc  M14 males showed a slight mating advantage over experienced dnc  + males. But when competition by experienced males for a single virgin female took place in the presence of nine immature males, dnc  + males were the successful maters in three-fourths of the trials.


Oecologia ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 164 (4) ◽  
pp. 931-941 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo D. Ribeiro ◽  
Pedro Daleo ◽  
Oscar O. Iribarne

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