| Literature DB >> 19895552 |
Holger Schielzeth1, Elisabeth Bolund, Wolfgang Forstmeier.
Abstract
Many species show substantial between-individual variation in mating preferences, but studying the causes of such variation remains a challenge. For example, the relative importance of heritable variation versus shared early environment effects (like sexual imprinting) on mating preferences has never been quantified in a population of animals. Here, we estimate the heritability of and early rearing effects on mate choice decisions in zebra finches based on the similarity of choices between pairs of genetic sisters raised apart and pairs of unrelated foster sisters. We found a low and nonsignificant heritability of preferences and no significant shared early rearing effects. A literature review shows that a low heritability of preferences is rather typical, whereas empirical tests for the relevance of sexual imprinting within populations are currently limited to very few studies. Although effects on preference functions (i.e., which male to prefer) were weak, we found strong individual consistency in choice behavior and part of this variation was heritable. It seems likely that variation in choice behavior (choosiness, responsiveness, sampling behavior) would produce patterns of nonrandom mating and this might be the more important source of between-individual differences in mating patterns.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19895552 PMCID: PMC2871178 DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2009.00890.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694
Published studies that present within-population heritability estimates of preference functions. We included only studies that analyze preference functions for traits that vary continuously within a population (although often only preferences for extremes were tested) and that estimate the heritability for the discrimination of mating stimuli (excluding estimates for the strength of a response to stimuli without discrimination).
| Study | Species | Preference for | Choice method | Manipulation of preferred trait | Heritability (± SE) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pink bollworm | pheromone composition (three component ratios) | sequential | yes | 0.14 ±0.05 | ||
| Moth | pulse rate and asynchrony interval of calls | simultanuous | yes | 0.21 ±0.13 | ||
| Arctiid moth | body size | simultanuous | samples of defined differences | 0.51 ±0.11 | sex-chromosome linked inheritance | |
| Field cricket | pulses per trill in calls | simultanuous | yes | 0.34 ±0.17 | ||
| Field cricket | long chirp relative to short-chirp song elements | simultanuous | yes | <0.00 | ||
| Guppy | male attractiveness (as measured in choice chamber) | simultanuous | samples including extremes | −0.07 ±0.13 | selection lines (both direct and indirect selection) | |
| Guppy | coloration & size (several measures), max for brightness contrast | simultanuous | no | 0.10 ±0.11 | maximal heritability from a large range of tests |
Illustration of the experimental design. Two pairs of genetic sisters (here A1–A2 and B1–B2) and two pairs of foster sisters (here C1–C2 and D1–D2) were tested with eight sets of males. Between trials, they were housed in duplets of two females per cage (C). We compared the agreement between genetic sisters (GS) and foster sisters (FS) to the agreement between unrelated females that did not share the same foster parents (U).
| Individual | A1 | A2 | B1 | B2 | C1 | C2 | D1 | D2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | ||||||||
| A2 | GS | |||||||
| B1 | U | |||||||
| B2 | U | C | GS | |||||
| C1 | U | C | U | |||||
| C2 | U | U | FS | |||||
| D1 | C | U | U | U | ||||
| D2 | U | U | U | C | FS |
Figure 1Similarity in preferences between pairs of genetic sisters and pairs of foster sisters. The preferences were measured as the proportion of time spent with the focal male in a two-way choice chamber. They were normalized by angular transformation (y’= arcsine(√y)) for display and analysis, but percentage-scale labels are shown in the plots. Forty-four pairs of genetic sisters and 44 pairs of foster sisters were tested with eight sets of two males each. Regression lines are shown for each pair of sisters. The black data points and the solid black regression line highlight a typical example (one close to the population mean) for the eight pairs of trials of one pair of sisters.
Figure 2Between-female agreement in mate choices in a two-way choice chamber. Each female had eight trials and proportion of agreements in dichotomized preferences (identity of the male that a female spent the larger fraction of time with) was calculated between pairs of genetic sisters, pairs of foster sisters and pairs of unrelated females. The three plots show all trials (A), only trials with time allocation to the preferred male of >70% (B), and only trials with time allocation to the preferred male of >85% (C). Because limiting the comparisons to only clear choices means excluding trials with less clear choices, sample sizes vary among plots. Differences between the agreement among genetic sisters and the agreement among foster sisters relative to the agreement among unrelated females were tested in a generalized linear model (GLM) with binomial error structure and logit link and a single categorical predictor (type of female pair) with three levels. P-values refer to the contrasts between the two types of females and the reference category (unrelated females).
Variance component (VC) analysis of female behavior in the choice chamber. Likelihood-ratio tests were used for significance testing. There were 176 females (44 pairs of genetic sisters and 44 pairs of foster sisters) that had eight trials each, 88 sets of males that had 16 trials each, and eight choice chambers with 176 trials in each. The broad-sense heritability is twice the similarity between full-siblings (this estimate includes possible maternal effects and part of dominance and epistatic interactions). The total female effect is the sum of genetic, foster environment, and additional female identity effects.
| Clarity of choice | Time with males | Number of comparisons | Female activity | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VC | χ2 | VC | χ2 | VC | χ2 | VC | χ2 | |||||
| Genetic component | 0.05 | 1.36 | 0.51 | 0.06 | 17.4 | <10−3 | 0.12 | 19.2 | <10−4 | 0.15 | 16.8 | <10−3 |
| Early rearing environment | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.00 | 0.00 | 0.0 | 1.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.00 | 0.00 | 0.0 | 0.99 |
| Additional female identity effects | 0.18 | 13.5 | <10−3 | 0.43 | 22.9 | <10−5 | 0.45 | 20.5 | <10−5 | 0.35 | 19.5 | <10−4 |
| Male pair component | 0.00 | 0.19 | 0.66 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.00 | 0.02 | 13.7 | <10−3 | 0.03 | 25.7 | <10−6 |
| Choice chamber component | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.98 | 0.01 | 16.8 | <10−4 | 0.02 | 17.4 | <10−4 | 0.03 | 13.7 | <10−3 |
| Residual | 0.77 | 0.50 | 0.39 | 0.44 | ||||||||
| Broad-sense heritability | 0.10 | 0.12 | 0.24 | 0.30 | ||||||||
| Total female effect | 0.23 | 0.50 | 0.57 | 0.50 | ||||||||