Alternative hypotheses linking the immune system and mate choice for good genes
Open Access
- 22 June 1998
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 265 (1401) , 1065-1073
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.1998.0400
Abstract
Why do males often have extravagant morphological and behavioural traits, and why do females prefer to mate with such males? The answers have been the focus of considerable debate since Darwin's The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex appeared in 1871. Recently the broadening of investigation to include fields outside evolutionary biology has shed new light on mate choice and sexual selection. Here, we focus on a specific set of hypotheses relating the biology of resisting disease–causing organisms with the production of condition–dependent sexual signals (advertisements). We present a framework that distinguishes three different hypotheses about trade–offs within the immune system that affect general condition. Hamilton and Zuk's original hypothesis suggests that hosts fight off disease through resistance to particular pathogens, which consequently lowers resistance to other pathogens. Changes in pathogens over evolutionary time in turn favours changes in which genes confer the best resistance. Alternatively, the immunocompetence hypotheses suggests that the energetic costs of mounting a response to any pathogen compete for resources with other things, such as producing or maintaining advertisements. Finally, improving resistance to pathogens could increase the negative impacts of the immune system on the host, via immunopathologies such as allergies or autoimmune diseases. If both disease and immunopathology affect condition, then sexual advertisements could signal a balance between the two. Studies of hypothesized links between genes, condition, the immune system and advertisements likely will require careful consideration of which hypothesis is being considered, and may necessitate different measures of immune system responses and different experimental protocols.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- Biological signals as handicapsPublished by Elsevier ,2006
- Mate selection—A selection for a handicapPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Ecological immunology: costly parasite defences and trade-offs in evolutionary ecologyPublished by Elsevier ,1999
- Adaptive or Nonadaptive Immunosuppression by Sex Hormones?The American Naturalist, 1994
- Effects of route of immunization, adjuvant and unrelated antigens on the humoral immune response in lines of chickens selected for antibody production against sheep erythrocytesVeterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, 1992
- Parasites, Bright Males, and the Immunocompetence HandicapThe American Naturalist, 1992
- Mating patterns in seminatural populations of mice influenced by MHC genotypeNature, 1991
- Common West African HLA antigens are associated with protection from severe malariaNature, 1991
- Parasites and Female Choice in the Ring-necked PheasantAmerican Zoologist, 1990
- The metabolic cost of feverCanadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1987