4.7 Article

Degree of anisogamy is unrelated to the intensity of sexual selection

期刊

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-98616-2

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资金

  1. Campus scholarship of the Hungarian government [EFOP-3.4.2-VEKOP-15-2015-00001]
  2. National Scientific Research Fund [OTKA K128289]
  3. Hungary's Economic Development and Innovation Operative Programme [GINOP 2.3.2-15-2016-00057]
  4. NKFIH Grant [KH 130430]
  5. Hungarian Ministry of Human Capacities [20385-3/2018/FEKUSTRAT]
  6. Royal Society [APEX APX\R1\191045]
  7. Leverhulme Trust [RF/2/RFG/2005/0279, ID200660763]
  8. Hungarian government [NKFIH-2558-1/2015, ELVONAL-KKP 126949]
  9. Royal Society (Wolfson Merit Award)
  10. UNKP Grant [ELTE/8083/10(2017)]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that the extent of anisogamy does not appear to predict the intensity of sexual selection, while the relative inputs of males and females into the care of offspring are the only significant predictor of sexual selection. Ecological factors, life-history, and demography have more substantial impacts on contemporary sex roles than the differences of gametic investments between the sexes.
Males and females often display different behaviours and, in the context of reproduction, these behaviours are labelled sex roles. The Darwin-Bateman paradigm argues that the root of these differences is anisogamy (i.e., differences in size and/or function of gametes between the sexes) that leads to biased sexual selection, and sex differences in parental care and body size. This evolutionary cascade, however, is contentious since some of the underpinning assumptions have been questioned. Here we investigate the relationships between anisogamy, sexual size dimorphism, sex difference in parental care and intensity of sexual selection using phylogenetic comparative analyses of 64 species from a wide range of animal taxa. The results question the first step of the Darwin-Bateman paradigm, as the extent of anisogamy does not appear to predict the intensity of sexual selection. The only significant predictor of sexual selection is the relative inputs of males and females into the care of offspring. We propose that ecological factors, life-history and demography have more substantial impacts on contemporary sex roles than the differences of gametic investments between the sexes.

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