Hierarchical selection theory and sex ratios I. General solutions for structured populations (Q1090642)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Hierarchical selection theory and sex ratios I. General solutions for structured populations
scientific article

    Statements

    Hierarchical selection theory and sex ratios I. General solutions for structured populations (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    1986
    0 references
    The content of this paper is best described by the author's abstract: Models of sex-ratio evolution in structured populations are derived with \textit{G. R. Price}'s covariance form for the hierarchical analysis of natural selection [Nature 227, 520-521 (1970)]. Previous work on competition among related males for mates (local mate competition), competition among related females for a limiting resource (local resource competition), inbreeding, group selection, and asymmetry of genetic inheritance between males and females, are subsumed under a general formulation for sex-ratio biases in structured populations. I found that the evolutionarily stable strategy sex ratio (males:females) for diploids is \(1-p_ m:1-p_ f\), where \(p_ m\) is the regression coefficient of relatedness of the controlling genotypes on males competing for mates, \(p_ f\) is the regression of controlling genotypes on females that compete for a fixed, limiting resource, and there is no inbreeding. For inbreeding and no competition among females, the evolutionarily stable strategy is \(1-p_ m:1+p_{mf}\), where \(p_{mf}\) is the regression of controlling genotypes on females' mates.
    0 references
    0 references
    population genetics
    0 references
    ESS
    0 references
    Models of sex-ratio evolution
    0 references
    structured populations
    0 references
    covariance form
    0 references
    hierarchical analysis of natural selection
    0 references
    local mate competition
    0 references
    local resource competition
    0 references
    group selection
    0 references
    asymmetry of genetic inheritance
    0 references
    evolutionarily stable strategy sex ratio
    0 references
    diploids
    0 references
    inbreeding
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references