Female resistance to male harm evolves in response to manipulation of sexual conflict.

The interests of males and females over reproduction rarely coincide and conflicts between the sexes over mate choice, mating frequency, reproductive investment, and parental care are common in many taxa. In Drosophila melanogaster, the optimum mating frequency is higher for males than it is for fem...

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Main Authors: Wigby, S, Chapman, T
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2004
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author Wigby, S
Chapman, T
author_facet Wigby, S
Chapman, T
author_sort Wigby, S
collection OXFORD
description The interests of males and females over reproduction rarely coincide and conflicts between the sexes over mate choice, mating frequency, reproductive investment, and parental care are common in many taxa. In Drosophila melanogaster, the optimum mating frequency is higher for males than it is for females. Furthermore, females that mate at high frequencies suffer significant mating costs due to the actions of male seminal fluid proteins. Sexual conflict is predicted to lead to sexually antagonistic coevolution, in which selection for adaptations that benefit males but harm females is balanced by counterselection in females to minimize the extent of male-induced harm. We tested the prediction that elevated sexual conflict should select for increased female resistance to male-induced harm and vice versa. We manipulated the intensity of sexual conflict by experimentally altering adult sex ratio. We created replicated lines of D. melanogaster in which the adult sex ratio was male biased (high conflict lines), equal (intermediate conflict lines), or female biased (low conflict lines). As predicted, females from high sexual conflict lines lived significantly longer in the presence of males than did females from low conflict lines. Our conclusion that the evolutionary response in females was to the level of male-induced harm is supported by the finding that there were no female longevity differences in the absence of males. Differences between males in female harming ability were not detected. This suggests that the response in females was to differences between selection treatments in mating frequency, and not to differences in male harmfulness.
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spelling oxford-uuid:129d6a7b-a049-45ed-bf3f-03d836db947e2022-03-26T10:08:52ZFemale resistance to male harm evolves in response to manipulation of sexual conflict.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:129d6a7b-a049-45ed-bf3f-03d836db947eEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2004Wigby, SChapman, TThe interests of males and females over reproduction rarely coincide and conflicts between the sexes over mate choice, mating frequency, reproductive investment, and parental care are common in many taxa. In Drosophila melanogaster, the optimum mating frequency is higher for males than it is for females. Furthermore, females that mate at high frequencies suffer significant mating costs due to the actions of male seminal fluid proteins. Sexual conflict is predicted to lead to sexually antagonistic coevolution, in which selection for adaptations that benefit males but harm females is balanced by counterselection in females to minimize the extent of male-induced harm. We tested the prediction that elevated sexual conflict should select for increased female resistance to male-induced harm and vice versa. We manipulated the intensity of sexual conflict by experimentally altering adult sex ratio. We created replicated lines of D. melanogaster in which the adult sex ratio was male biased (high conflict lines), equal (intermediate conflict lines), or female biased (low conflict lines). As predicted, females from high sexual conflict lines lived significantly longer in the presence of males than did females from low conflict lines. Our conclusion that the evolutionary response in females was to the level of male-induced harm is supported by the finding that there were no female longevity differences in the absence of males. Differences between males in female harming ability were not detected. This suggests that the response in females was to differences between selection treatments in mating frequency, and not to differences in male harmfulness.
spellingShingle Wigby, S
Chapman, T
Female resistance to male harm evolves in response to manipulation of sexual conflict.
title Female resistance to male harm evolves in response to manipulation of sexual conflict.
title_full Female resistance to male harm evolves in response to manipulation of sexual conflict.
title_fullStr Female resistance to male harm evolves in response to manipulation of sexual conflict.
title_full_unstemmed Female resistance to male harm evolves in response to manipulation of sexual conflict.
title_short Female resistance to male harm evolves in response to manipulation of sexual conflict.
title_sort female resistance to male harm evolves in response to manipulation of sexual conflict
work_keys_str_mv AT wigbys femaleresistancetomaleharmevolvesinresponsetomanipulationofsexualconflict
AT chapmant femaleresistancetomaleharmevolvesinresponsetomanipulationofsexualconflict