| Literature DB >> 25928309 |
Marion Mehlis1, Anna K Rahn2, Theo C M Bakker3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mating between close relatives often leads to a reduction of an individual's fitness, due to an increased expression of deleterious alleles. Thus, in many animal taxa pre- as well as postcopulatory inbreeding avoidance mechanisms have evolved. An increased risk of inbreeding and hence a loss of genetic variation may occur during founder events as in most cases only few individuals establish a new population. The threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) is a small externally fertilizing fish species subject to strong sperm competition. Sticklebacks inhabit both marine and freshwater environments and anadromous populations have repeatedly established new genetically less diverse freshwater populations. Previous studies showed that anadromous sticklebacks strongly suffer from inbreeding depression and when given the choice females prefer to mate with unrelated males.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25928309 PMCID: PMC4415302 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-015-0353-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Population structure analysis
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| freshwater | 17 | 9 | 4.89 | 0.6686 | 0.6471 | 0.033 | 0.559 | 16.479 | 18 |
| anadromous | 17 | 9 | 13.89 | 0.9063 | 0.8758 | 0.035 | 0.159 | 23.868 | 18 |
Shown is a comparison of the variation of nine microsatellite markers based on 34 randomly chosen unrelated individuals (17 F1 fish from the freshwater and 17 F1 fish from the anadromous stickleback population) (see [41,69], and Additional file 1 for further details]. N: number of individuals typed, A: mean number of alleles per locus, He: expected heterozygosity, Ho: observed heterozygosity, FIS: inbreeding coefficient, and results of chi-square tests for deviation from expected proportions under Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (HWE) (given are p-values, χ2 and degrees of freedom, df).
Figure 1Experimental design. In each trial two males and two females were used. In the main experiment one male (“brother”) was related to the female (“sister”), whereas in the control experiment both males (“brother” and non-sib male) were unrelated to the female (unrelated female) (the number of fertilization trials consisting of two sub-trials each were Nfreshwater = 17; Nanadromous = 22).
Figure 2Results of the paternity analyses. Percentage of fertilized eggs (“brother” minus non-sib male) for the main and the control experiment both for the freshwater (Nfreshwater = 17) as well as the anadromous population (Nanadromous = 22) plotted as median, quartiles and range. Negative values indicate that the non-sib male won during sperm competition trials. ns, not significant.
Figure 3Relationship between the paternity share in the main experiment and in the control experiment. Shown are the data points and regression lines for both the freshwater (N = 17, crosses, broken line indicates the least-square linear regression line) and for the anadromous (N = 22, circles, solid line indicates the least-square linear regression line) population. For statistics see text.
Sperm morphology traits in relation to fertilization success
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| Tail length | 4.909 | 0.027 |
| Head to tail length ratio | 4.398 | 0.036 |
Both sperm tail length and head to tail length ratio significantly explain fertilization success in the in vitro sperm competition trials with fish from a freshwater and an anadromous stickleback population. Given are p-values and χ2. See text for details.
Figure 4Sperm morphology in relation to fertilization success. Shown are the differences in fertilization success and the differences in sperm head to tail length ratio (“brother” minus non-sib male). Data for the main and the control experiment were pooled N = 39. The line indicates the least-square linear regression line. For statistics see text.