Female choice for related males in wild red-backed toadlets (Pseudophryne coriacea)
Daniel M O’Brien,
J Scott Keogh,
Aimee J Silla and
Phillip G Byrne
Behavioral Ecology, 2019, vol. 30, issue 4, 928-937
Abstract:
Mate choice for genetic benefits is assumed to be widespread in nature, yet very few studies have comprehensively examined relationships between female mate choice and male genetic quality in wild populations. Here, we use exhaustive sampling and single nucleotide polymorphisms to provide a partial test of the “good genes as heterozygosity” hypothesis and the “genetic compatibility” hypothesis in an entire population of terrestrial breeding red-backed toadlets, Pseudophryne coriacea. We found that successful males did not display higher heterozygosity, despite a positive relationship between male heterozygosity and offspring heterozygosity. Rather, in the larger of 2 breeding events, we found that successful males were more genetically similar to their mate than expected under random mating, indicating that females can use pre- or post-copulatory mate choice mechanisms to bias paternity toward more related males. These findings provide no support for the good genes as heterozygosity hypothesis but lend support to the genetic compatibility hypothesis. A complete test of this hypothesis will now require evaluating how parental genetic similarity impacts offspring fitness. Terrestrial toadlets show a high degree of site fidelity, high levels of genetic structuring between populations, and frequently hybridize with sister species. As such, female mate choice for related males may be an adaptive strategy to reduce outbreeding depression. Our findings provide the first population-wide evidence for non-random preferential inbreeding in a wild amphibian. We argue that such reproductive patterns may be common in amphibians because extreme genetic differentiation within meta-populations creates an inherently high risk of outbreeding depression. Matings between relatives could be more common than we think! Using a genomic approach to assess paternity biases in an entire population of red-backed toadlets, we show that females consistently produce offspring sired by kin. Toadlets return to the same ponds to breed each year and are expected to be highly adapted to their local environments. By reproducing with relatives, females might ensure that their offspring retain gene complexes that maximize their survival.
Keywords: amphibian; genetic compatibility; heterozygosity; inbreeding; mate choice; relatedness; reproduction (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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