MODELS OF SEXUAL SELECTION ON A QUANTITATIVE GENETIC TRAIT WHEN PREFERENCE IS ACQUIRED BY SEXUAL IMPRINTING
Open Access
- 1 January 2001
- Vol. 55 (1) , 25-32
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0014-3820.2001.tb01269.x
Abstract
The evolution of a quantitative genetic trait under stabilizing viability selection and sexual selection is modeled for a polygynous species in which female mating preferences are acquired by sexual imprinting on the parents and by exposure to the surviving population at large. Stabilizing viability selection acts equally on both sexes in the case of a sexually monomorphic trait and on males only in the case of a dimorphic trait. A genetically fixed sensory or perceptual bias defines the origin of the scale on which the trait is measured, and the possibility is incorporated that female preferences may deviate asymmetrically from the familiar—either toward or away from this origin. When viability selection is strong relative to sexual selection, the models predict that the mean trait value will evolve to the viability optimum. With intermediate ratios of the strength of viability to sexual selection, a stable equilibrium can occur on either side of this viability optimum, depending on the direction of asymmetry in female preferences. When viability selection is relatively weak and certain other conditions are also satisfied, runaway selection is predicted.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evidence for Variable Selective Pressures at MC1RAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2000
- Sexual selection, speciation and imprinting: separating the sheep from the goatsTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 1999
- Cultural Inheritance of Song and Its Role in the Evolution of Darwin's FinchesEvolution, 1996
- Do the colours of parents, companions and self influence assortative mating in the polychromatic Midas cichlid?Animal Behaviour, 1990
- Sexual selection for sensory exploitation in the frog Physalaemus pustulosusNature, 1990
- Sexual Selection By Female Choice In Polygynous AnimalsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1987
- Preferences for cousins in Japanese quailNature, 1982
- Skin-Pigment Regulation of Vitamin-D Biosynthesis in ManScience, 1967
- Inbreeding as a result of imprintingHeredity, 1960
- Der Kumpan in der Umwelt des VogelsJournal of Ornithology, 1935