Supplementary material from "Female-limited X-chromosome evolution effects on male pre- and post-copulatory success"
Posted on 2021-02-18 - 09:40
Intralocus sexual conflict arises when the expression of shared alleles at a single locus generates opposite fitness effects in each sex (i.e. sexually antagonistic alleles), preventing each sex from reaching its sex-specific optimum. Despite its importance to reproductive success, the relative contribution of intralocus sexual conflict to male pre- and post-copulatory success is not well-understood. Here, we used a female-limited X-chromosome (FLX) evolution experiment to limit the inheritance of the X-chromosome to the matriline, eliminating possible counter-selection in males and allowing the X-chromosome to accumulate female-benefit alleles. After greater than 100 generations of FLX evolution, we studied the effect of the evolved X-chromosome on male attractiveness and sperm competitiveness. We found a non-significant increase in attractiveness and decrease in sperm offense ability in males expressing the evolved X-chromosomes, but a significant increase in their ability to avoid displacement by other males' sperm. This is consistent with a trade-off between these traits, perhaps mediated by differences in body size, causing a small net reduction in overall male fitness in the FLX lines. These results indicate that the X-chromosome in Drosophila melanogaster is subject to selection via intralocus sexual conflict in males.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Manat, Yesbol; Lund-Hansen, Katrine K.; Katsianis, Georgios; Abbott, Jessica K. (2021). Supplementary material from "Female-limited X-chromosome evolution effects on male pre- and post-copulatory success". The Royal Society. Collection. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5309800.v1