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Evolution


Title:Quantitative genetics of female mate preferences in an ancestral and a novel environment
Author(s):Delcourt M; Blows MW; Rundle HD;
Address:"Department of Biology and Centre for Advanced Research in Environmental Genomics, University of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada"
Journal Title:Evolution
Year:2010
Volume:64
Issue:9
Page Number:2758 - 2766
DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2010.01031.x
ISSN/ISBN:1558-5646 (Electronic) 0014-3820 (Linking)
Abstract:"A female's mate preference is a potentially complex function relating variation in multiple male phenotypes with her probability of accepting individual males as a mate. Estimating the quantitative genetic basis preference functions within a population is empirically challenging yet key to understanding preference evolution. We employed a recently described approach that uses random-coefficient mixed models in the analysis of function-valued traits. Using a half-sibling breeding design in a laboratory-adapted Drosophila serrata population, we estimated the genetic (co)variance function of female preference for male sexual displays composed of nine contact pheromones. The breeding design was performed across two environments: the food to which the population was well adapted and a novel food that reduced average female productivity by 35%. Significant genetic variance in female preference was detected and the majority (64.2%) was attributable to a single genetic dimension (eigenfunction), suggesting that preferences for different pheromones are not genetically independent. The second eigenfunction, accounting for 24% of the total genetic variance, approached significance in a conservative test, suggesting the existence of a second, independent genetic dimension. There was no evidence that the genetic basis of female preference differed between the two environments, suggesting the absence of genotype-by-environment interactions and hence a lack of condition-dependent preference expression"
Keywords:"Animals Drosophila/genetics/*physiology Female Genetic Variation Genotype Male *Mating Preference, Animal Sex Attractants;"
Notes:"MedlineDelcourt, Matthieu Blows, Mark W Rundle, Howard D eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2010/05/21 Evolution. 2010 Sep; 64(9):2758-66. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2010.01031.x"

 
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