| Authors | Tom J. M. Van Dooren |
| Journal | Evolutionary Ecology |
| Page number | 1179-1195 |
| Serial number | 25 |
| Volume number | 1 |
| Paper Type | Full Paper |
| Published At | 2011 |
| Journal Grade | ISI |
| Journal Type | Electronic |
| Journal Country | Netherlands |
| Journal Index | ISI،JCR،Scopus |
Abstract
Abstract Reproductive effort, egg number and egg size are traditionally considered to be
‘female’ life history traits. However, females often adjust the amount of resources allocated
to reproduction depending on their mate, causing male environmental effects on life
history traits. If females respond to male traits which are genetically variable, then male
environmental effects contain indirect genetic effects. Estimates of how much of the total
variation in life history traits originates from female effects versus male environmental
effects, seems mostly lacking. We have investigated variation in rates of egg production
and in egg size in the annual Argentinian blackfin pearl killifish Austrolebias nigripinnis, in
a crossed design where males were exchanged repeatedly between females. Our analysis of
phenotypic variance components of reproductive effort, egg size and egg number indicates
that the amount of variation contributed by male environmental effects is equal (egg size,
reproductive effort) or larger (egg number) than that between females. For egg size and
number, we find that male environmental effects consist of a male random effect representing
the average response of females to male phenotype, plus a female-male interaction
term. This term can be understood as the deviation from the population mean of an
individual female’s response. For reproductive effort, we find that the male environmental
effect consists of an interaction term only. Random effects on egg size and number
additionally vary in magnitude depending on the weekday where we collected eggs,
probably due to cyclic variation in experimental conditions. Since we find that both male
phenotype and environmental conditions affect egg size and number as determined by females, our results suggest that selection on these life history traits will be frequencydependent.
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