4.5 Article

The coevolutionary dynamics of cryptic female choice

Journal

EVOLUTION LETTERS
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 191-202

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/evlett/qrad025

Keywords

individual-based model; sperm competition; postcopulatory sexual selection; reproductive isolation; Fisherian Runaway Selection

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In contrast to pre-mating sexual selection, little theoretical research has focused on the coevolution of postmating traits via cryptic female choice. This study used simulation models to investigate the impact of nondirectional cryptic female choice on male-mediated postmating processes, as well as the interaction between sperm competition risk, cryptic female choice strength, and sperm traits. The results showed that incorporating cryptic female choice can result in reduced male investment in ejaculates. It also revealed that genetic correlations between cryptic female choice and sperm traits can evolve even with weak cryptic female choice and low sperm competition risk.
In contrast to sexual selection on traits that affect interactions between the sexes before mating, little theoretical research has focused on the coevolution of postmating traits via cryptic female choice (when females bias fertilization toward specific males). We used simulation models to ask (a) whether and, if so, how nondirectional cryptic female choice (female-by-male interactions in fertilization success) causes deviations from models that focus exclusively on male-mediated postmating processes, and (b) how the risk of sperm competition, the strength of cryptic female choice, and tradeoffs between sperm number and sperm traits interact to influence the coevolutionary dynamics between cryptic female choice and sperm traits. We found that incorporating cryptic female choice can result in males investing much less in their ejaculates than predicted by models with sperm competition only. We also found that cryptic female choice resulted in the evolution of genetic correlations between cryptic female choice and sperm traits, even when the strength of cryptic female choice was weak, and the risk of sperm competition was low. This suggests that cryptic female choice may be important even in systems with low multiple mating. These genetic correlations increased with the risk of sperm competition and as the strength of cryptic female choice increased. When the strength of cryptic female choice and risk of sperm competition was high, extreme codivergence of sperm traits and cryptic female choice preference occurred even when the sperm trait traded off with sperm number. We also found that male traits lagged behind the evolution of female traits; this lag decreased with increasing strength of cryptic female choice and risk of sperm competition. Overall, our results suggest that cryptic female choice deserves more attention theoretically and may be driving trait evolution in ways just beginning to be explored.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available