Assortative mating and mate-choice contributes to the maintenance of a developmental dimorphism in Streblospio benedicti.

Erika L Ruskie, Christina Zakas
Author Information
  1. Erika L Ruskie: Department of Biological Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
  2. Christina Zakas: Department of Biological Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA. ORCID

Abstract

Assortative mating, where individuals non-randomly mate with respect to phenotype or genotype, can occur when preferences between potential mates have evolved. When such mate preferences occur in a population it can drive evolutionary and phenotypic divergence. But the extent to which assortative mating, mate preference, and development are evolutionarily linked remains unclear. Here we use Streblospio benedicti, a marine annelid with a rare developmental dimorphism, to investigate if mate-choice could contribute to developmental evolution. For S. benedicti two types of ecologically and phenotypically similar adults persist in natural populations, but they give rise to distinctly different offspring with alternative life-histories. This dimorphism persists despite the absence of post-zygotic reproductive barriers, where crosses between the developmental types can produce phenotypically intermediate offspring. How this life-history strategy evolved remains unknown, but assortative mating is a typical first step in evolutionary divergence. Here we investigate if female mate-choice is occurring in this species. We find that mate preferences could be contributing to the maintenance of alternative developmental and life-history strategies.

Keywords

References

  1. Am Nat. 2011 Mar;177(3):346-57 [PMID: 21460543]
  2. Mol Ecol. 2012 Nov;21(22):5447-60 [PMID: 23057973]
  3. Trends Genet. 2012 Jul;28(7):342-50 [PMID: 22520730]
  4. Curr Top Dev Biol. 2022;147:497-521 [PMID: 35337460]
  5. Am Nat. 2002 Mar;159 Suppl 3:S22-35 [PMID: 18707367]
  6. Proc Biol Sci. 1998 Dec 7;265(1412):2273-8 [PMID: 9881472]
  7. Bioessays. 2019 Jul;41(7):e1900047 [PMID: 31245871]
  8. Evolution. 1997 Dec;51(6):1764-1772 [PMID: 28565111]
  9. Am Nat. 2000 Aug;156(2):175-192 [PMID: 10856200]
  10. Trends Ecol Evol. 1991 Feb;6(2):45-50 [PMID: 21232422]
  11. Ecol Evol. 2017 Apr 22;7(11):3883-3893 [PMID: 28616185]
  12. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1986 Mar;83(5):1388-92 [PMID: 16578790]
  13. Trends Ecol Evol. 1987 Jan;2(1):8-13 [PMID: 21227808]
  14. Trends Ecol Evol. 2021 Apr;36(4):294-307 [PMID: 33546877]
  15. Evol Dev. 2010 Nov-Dec;12(6):618-27 [PMID: 21040427]
  16. Genome Biol Evol. 2022 Feb 4;14(2): [PMID: 35078222]
  17. Eugen Q. 1968 Jun;15(2):141-3 [PMID: 5702329]
  18. Int J Dev Biol. 2014;58(6-8):593-9 [PMID: 25690973]
  19. Evolution. 2005 Apr;59(4):705-19 [PMID: 15926683]
  20. Am Nat. 2018 Jan;191(1):1-20 [PMID: 29244561]
  21. Elife. 2018 Sep 10;7: [PMID: 30198842]
  22. Integr Comp Biol. 2012 Jul;52(1):120-7 [PMID: 22495287]
  23. Evol Dev. 2007 Nov-Dec;9(6):643-53 [PMID: 17976059]
  24. Integr Comp Biol. 2012 Jul;52(1):197-212 [PMID: 22576818]
  25. Evol Dev. 2015 Jul-Aug;17(4):240-7 [PMID: 26174100]
  26. Evolution. 1991 Mar;45(2):380-397 [PMID: 28567881]
  27. Evolution. 2021 Jul;75(7):1607-1618 [PMID: 33928631]
  28. Am Nat. 2013 Jun;181(6):E125-38 [PMID: 23669548]
  29. Am Nat. 1997 Jul;150(1):48-72 [PMID: 18811275]
  30. Integr Comp Biol. 2012 Jul;52(1):128-37 [PMID: 22596057]
  31. Evolution. 2000 Aug;54(4):1247-59 [PMID: 11005292]
  32. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2019 Mar 18;374(1768):20180179 [PMID: 30966958]

Grants

  1. R35 GM142853/NIGMS NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Female
Animals
Mating Preference, Animal
Sex Characteristics
Reproduction
Phenotype
Annelida

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0matedevelopmentalmatingcanpreferencesevolutionarybenedictidimorphismmate-choicelife-historyAssortativeoccurevolveddivergenceassortativeremainsStreblospioinvestigatetypesphenotypicallyoffspringalternativemaintenanceindividualsnon-randomlyrespectphenotypegenotypepotentialmatespopulationdrivephenotypicextentpreferencedevelopmentevolutionarilylinkedunclearusemarineannelidrarecontributeevolutionStwoecologicallysimilaradultspersistnaturalpopulationsgiverisedistinctlydifferentlife-historiespersistsdespiteabsencepost-zygoticreproductivebarrierscrossesproduceintermediatestrategyunknowntypicalfirststepfemaleoccurringspeciesfindcontributingstrategiescontributesgeneticschoice

Similar Articles

Cited By