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Both Costs and Benefits of Sex Correlate With Relative Frequency of Asexual Reproduction in Cyclically ParthenogenicDaphnia pulicariaPopulations
Author(s) -
Desiree E. Allen,
Michael Lynch
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1534/genetics.107.082479
Subject(s) - biology , trait , offspring , population , sexual selection , parthenogenesis , asexual reproduction , daphnia pulex , sexual reproduction , genetic variation , selection (genetic algorithm) , reproduction , daphnia , genetics , evolutionary biology , ecology , gene , demography , pregnancy , embryo , crustacean , artificial intelligence , computer science , programming language , sociology
Sexual reproduction is generally believed to yield beneficial effects via the expansion of expressed genetic variation, which increases the efficiency of selection and the adaptive potential of a population. However, when nonadditive gene action is involved, sex can actually impede the adaptive progress of a population. If selection promotes coupling disequilibria between genes of similar effect, recombination and segregation can result in a decrease in expressed genetic variance in the offspring population. In addition, when nonadditive gene action underlies a quantitative trait, sex can produce a change in trait means in a direction opposite to that favored by selection. In this study we measured the change in genotypic trait means and genetic variances across a sexual generation in four populations of the cyclical parthenogen Daphnia pulicaria, which vary predictably in their incidence of sexual reproduction. We show that both the costs and benefits of sex, as measured by changes in means and variances in life-history traits, increase substantially with decreasing frequency of sex.

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