TY - JOUR
T1 - Impact of sexually antagonistic genital morphologies on female reproduction and wild population demography
AU - Takami, Yasuoki
AU - Fukuhara, Tomohiko
AU - Yokoyama, Jun
AU - Kawata, Masakado
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Yuma Takahashi and Teiji Sota for their comments on an early draft of the manuscript, and Saki Watanabe, Takahiro Kuroda, and Yong Hwan Park for their help with the experiment. We also thank Peter Tiffin, Brian Hollis and three anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments on the manuscript. This study was partly supported by JSPS KAK-ENHI Grant Number 24570024 to YT. The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The Author(s). Evolution © 2018 The Society for the Study of Evolution.
PY - 2018/11
Y1 - 2018/11
N2 - Sexual conflict is a strong driver of evolution. The evolutionary outcomes of sexual conflict can, in turn, influence ecological processes within populations, for example, demography. However, evidence for the latter hypothesis is scarce, especially in the wild. Here, we show that sexual conflict is associated with demographic processes determining population size in the ground beetle Carabus insulicola with elaborate male and female genitalia based on individual- and population-level analyses. We found that sexually antagonistic selection can operate on the genitalia: longer male genitalia can be beneficial in sperm competition but decrease female reproductive success with increased egg dumping, whereas longer female genitalia are resistant to this male harassment via decreased egg dumping and increased fertilization rate. As expected from sexually antagonistic coevolution due to sexual conflict, we detected coevolutionary divergence between male and female genital sizes among populations. In parallel with decrease in female reproductive success, more harmful males with longer genitalia and less resistant females with shorter genitalia were related to small effective population sizes. Thus, sexual conflict may promote coevolutionary diversification between sexual traits, and this was associated with a demographic process. Our findings provide an insight into sex-driven eco-evolutionary dynamics in the wild.
AB - Sexual conflict is a strong driver of evolution. The evolutionary outcomes of sexual conflict can, in turn, influence ecological processes within populations, for example, demography. However, evidence for the latter hypothesis is scarce, especially in the wild. Here, we show that sexual conflict is associated with demographic processes determining population size in the ground beetle Carabus insulicola with elaborate male and female genitalia based on individual- and population-level analyses. We found that sexually antagonistic selection can operate on the genitalia: longer male genitalia can be beneficial in sperm competition but decrease female reproductive success with increased egg dumping, whereas longer female genitalia are resistant to this male harassment via decreased egg dumping and increased fertilization rate. As expected from sexually antagonistic coevolution due to sexual conflict, we detected coevolutionary divergence between male and female genital sizes among populations. In parallel with decrease in female reproductive success, more harmful males with longer genitalia and less resistant females with shorter genitalia were related to small effective population sizes. Thus, sexual conflict may promote coevolutionary diversification between sexual traits, and this was associated with a demographic process. Our findings provide an insight into sex-driven eco-evolutionary dynamics in the wild.
KW - Carabus insulicola
KW - eco-evolutionary dynamics
KW - population size
KW - sexual conflict
KW - sexual selection
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U2 - 10.1111/evo.13603
DO - 10.1111/evo.13603
M3 - Article
C2 - 30238547
AN - SCOPUS:85054546489
SN - 0014-3820
VL - 72
SP - 2449
EP - 2461
JO - Evolution; international journal of organic evolution
JF - Evolution; international journal of organic evolution
IS - 11
ER -