| Literature DB >> 26860745 |
Emily R Ebel1,2, Patrick C Phillips3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inbreeding increases homozygosity and exposes deleterious recessive alleles, generally decreasing the fitness of inbred individuals. Interestingly, males and females are usually affected differently by inbreeding, though the more vulnerable sex depends on the species and trait measured.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26860745 PMCID: PMC4748534 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-016-0604-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Summary of previous studies on sex-specific inbreeding depression. Only studies that quantified inbreeding depression comparably for both sexes are included
| Species | Vulnerable sex | Traits examined | Conclusions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wild gourd | Female | Fruit and flower number, seed germination, pollen success | Female function requires more resources than male function | [ |
| Morning glory | Female | Flower and seed number, survival | Different numbers of loci affecting fitness or different average contributions | [ |
|
| Male | Larval-adult survival, female fecundity, male mating success | Inclusion of the opportunity for male-male competition increases differences in inbreeding depression among sexes | [ |
|
| Male | Egg hatchability, larval-adult survival, female fecundity, male mating success | Sexual selection makes inbreeding more costly for males | [ |
|
| Both | Egg-to-adult viability | No sex-specific inbreeding depression | [ |
| Stalk-eyed flies | Male/Both | Eyespan, thorax length, wing length | Sexually-selected trait (eyespan) more sensitive in males; no sex-specific differences in other traits | [ |
| Beetle | Female | Adult mortality | Sex-specific alleles involved in inbreeding depression; hemizygosity causes male-specific selection | [ |
| Beetle | Male | Sexual odorant signaling | Odorant may be male-only sexually selected trait | [ |
| Beetle | Male | Proportion of offspring in competitive environment | Males have greater reproductive variance; stressful environment amplifies inbreeding depression in males | [ |
| Butterfly | Male | Fertility | Sex-specific alleles involved in inbreeding depression; “direct or indirect fertility selection…operating differentially among the sexes” | [ |
| Hihi (bird) | Male* | Embryo/nestling mortality | Size dimorphism may increase inbreeding sensitivity; *lack of comparably inbred females may suggest elevated mortality | [ |
| Takahe (bird) | Female | Fledgling success | Sex-effect explanation “currently unknown” | [ |
| Song sparrow | Female | Offspring number and survival | Maternal effects increase female inbreeding sensitivity; reproductive ecology may decrease male sensitivity | [ |
| Song sparrow | Female/ Male/Both | Immune response (3 types) | “not clear why inbreeding effects should differ between males and females”; perhaps sex-specific variation in life-history allocation or physiology | [ |
| Japanese quail | Female | Hatching success, viability, fertility | Maternal effects; delay of sexual maturity in females | [ |
| Great tit | Both | Hatching, fledging, and breeding success | No sex-specific inbreeding depression | [ |
| Great tit | Female | Hatching success | Maternal effects increase female inbreeding sensitivity | [ |
| Zebra finch | Both/Female | Body mass, tarsus length, wing length, fat | Most morphological traits show similar patterns of inbreeding depression; sex-specific traits also vunerable | [ |
| Mouse | Male | Adult and offspring survivorship, male competitive ability | Sexual selection makes inbreeding more costly for males | [ |
| Gazelle | Female | Longevity | Longer female lifespan is more sensitive to inbreeding depression | [ |
Fig. 1Summary of design of inbreeding and trait assays. Green circles illustrate worms that were inbred through five generations of brother-sister crosses, until f = 0.59. Red circles illustrate worms that were assayed each generation for three fitness-related traits. Only one of the ten total lineages is shown
Fig. 2Sex-specific effects of inbreeding on (a) total offspring number and (b) egg-to-adult survival. Females experience more severe inbreeding depression than males in both traits. Error bars are one standard error
Analysis of variance for the sex-specific effects of inbreeding on offspring number and survivorship
| Offspring number | Egg to adult viability | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| MS |
|
|
| χ2 |
| |
| Inbreeding ( | 1 | 123.62 | 37.38 | <0.0001 | 1 | 246.9 | <0.0001 |
| Sex | 1 | 5.86 | 0.58 | 0.4659 | 1 | 205.8 | <0.0001 |
| Lineage | 8 | 59.17 | 5.80 | 0.0113 | 8 | 623.5 | <0.0001 |
| Sex x Lineage | 8 | 10.20 | 3.08 | 0.0019 | 8 | 313.0 | <0.0001 |
| Sex x | 1 | 16.02 | 4.84 | 0.0279 | 1 | 44.9 | <0.0001 |
| Error | 1,383 | 0.62 | 32,160 | ||||
Offspring analyzed via ANOVA on ln scale, viability via logistic regression
Effects of inbreeding by trait and sex. All trait values are least squared mean estimates from the general linear model of nine lineages (±SEM)
| Trait | Sex |
|
| δ |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Offspring number | ♀ | 363.5 (±14.9) | 157.8 (±18.6) | 0.88 | 2.08 (±0.34) | <0.0001 |
| ♂ | 348.1 (±14.9) | 220.2 (±19.9) | 0.62 | 0.98 (±0.37) | 0.0081 | |
| Egg survivorship | ♀ | 0.79 (±.037) | 0.60 (±.040) | 0.43 | 0.57 (±0.16) | 0.0004 |
| ♂ | 0.82 (±.037) | 0.76 (±.041) | 0.12 | 0.13 (±0.07) | 0.0680 | |
| Mating ability | ♂ | 2.00 (±.09) | 1.68 (±0.12) | 0.18 | 0.20 (±0.09) | 0.0380 |
Fig. 3Age specific effects of inbreeding on reproductive output for females (top) and males (bottom). Day 1 indicates the first day of the cross
Fig. 4Lineage-specific regressions of male and female inbreeding depression on offspring number. Each plot (a-i) represents the inbreeding trajectory for one of the nine lineages analyzed in the experiment, in the order in which they were founded. Female values are represented by the dark circles and solid line; male values by the open squares and dashed line. On average, females lose fitness more quickly than males, although the actual responses are highly lineage-dependent
Fig. 5Average effect of inbreeding on male mating ability. Inbreeding depression appears to plateau after one generation of sibling mating. Error bars are one standard error