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Transient polymorphisms in parental care strategies drive divergence of sex roles

Biology

Transient polymorphisms in parental care strategies drive divergence of sex roles

X. Long and F. J. Weissing

This paper by Xiaoyan Long and Franz J. Weissing explores the intricate dynamics of parental roles in species through evolutionary simulations. The findings reveal that sex-based parenting conflicts and patterns challenge traditional views, indicating that changes in parental care are more complex than previously thought.... show more
Abstract
The parental roles of males and females differ considerably between and within species. By means of individual-based evolutionary simulations, we strive to explain this diversity. We show that the conflict between the sexes creates a sex bias (towards maternal or paternal care), even if the two sexes are initially identical. When including sexual selection, there are two outcomes: either female mate choice and maternal care or no mate choice and paternal care. Interestingly, the care pattern drives sexual selection and not vice versa. Longer-term simulations exhibit rapid switches between alternative parental care patterns, even in constant environments. Hence, the evolutionary lability of sex roles observed in phylogenetic studies is not necessarily caused by external changes. Overall, our findings are in striking contrast to the predictions of mathematical models. We show that the discrepancies are caused by transient within-sex polymorphisms in parental strategies, a factor largely neglected in current sex-role theory.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Oct 26, 2023
Authors
Xiaoyan Long, Franz J. Weissing
Tags
parental roles
evolutionary simulations
sex bias
sexual selection
parental care
polymorphisms
theory
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