THE COST OF FLUCTUATING INBREEDING DEPRESSION
Open Access
- 1 May 2002
- Vol. 56 (5) , 1059-1062
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb01416.x
Abstract
We present a phenotypic model for the evolution of self-fertilization in an infinite population of annual hermaphrodites for the case in which fitness and inbreeding depression vary among generations (e.g., due to fluctuations in the environment from year to year). Conditions for the evolution of selfing, mixed mating, and outcrossing are derived and are compared with results from numerical calculations that assume a normal distribution of inbreeding depression. In contrast to the situation in which inbreeding depression does not vary, when inbreeding depression fluctuates in a stochastic manner among generations with a mean less than 0.5, selfing is not necessarily selected. Thus, fluctuating inbreeding depression can be viewed as an additional cost of selfing that may stabilize mixed mating systems. These results emphasize the need to take into account fluctuating inbreeding depression in empirical studies aimed at understanding mating system evolution in annuals.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Can Varying Inbreeding Depression Select for Intermediary Selfing Rates?The American Naturalist, 2001
- Effects of competition on lifetime estimates of inbreeding depression in the outcrossing plant Crepis sancta (Asteraceae)Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 2000
- Evolutionarily singular strategies and the adaptive growth and branching of the evolutionary treeEvolutionary Ecology, 1998
- Ecology and evolution of plant matingTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 1996
- Inbreeding Depression in Partially Self-Fertilizing Decodon verticillatus (Lythraceae): Population-Genetic and Experimental AnalysesEvolution, 1994
- Inbreeding Depression in Two Mimulus Taxa Measured by Multigenerational Changes in the Inbreeding CoefficientEvolution, 1993
- Inbreeding Depression Doesn't Matter: The Genetic Basis of Mating-System EvolutionEvolution, 1988
- Inbreeding Depression And Its Evolutionary ConsequencesAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1987
- AVERAGE EXCESS AND AVERAGE EFFECT OF A GENE SUBSTITUTIONAnnals of Eugenics, 1941
- The effects of cross and self fertilisation in the vegetable kingdom /Published by Biodiversity Heritage Library ,1876