2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2001.tb00819.x
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Male Genotype Affects Female Longevity in Drosophila Melanogaster

Abstract: Abstract. While it is widely recognized that the manner in which organisms adjust their timing of reproduction reflects evolutionary strategies aimed at minimizing offspring mortality or maximizing reproductive output, the conditions under which the evolutionarily stable strategy involves synchronous or asynchronous reproduction is a matter of considerable discord. A recent theoretical model predicts that whether a population displays reproductive synchrony or asynchrony will depend on the relative scales of i… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Our study corroborates previous studies by showing a negative correlation between fidelity and female lifespan (Civetta and Clark 2000) and no correlation between P 2 and female lifespan (Civetta and Clark 2000;Sawby and Hughes 2001). Because our study used completely outbred flies, and the earlier studies used lines homozygous for 40% of their genome, the congruence of results suggests that inbreeding depression alone cannot account for genetic variation in maleinduced harm to their mates' survival.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
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“…Our study corroborates previous studies by showing a negative correlation between fidelity and female lifespan (Civetta and Clark 2000) and no correlation between P 2 and female lifespan (Civetta and Clark 2000;Sawby and Hughes 2001). Because our study used completely outbred flies, and the earlier studies used lines homozygous for 40% of their genome, the congruence of results suggests that inbreeding depression alone cannot account for genetic variation in maleinduced harm to their mates' survival.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…In species where males rarely engage in agonistic interactions, male offense and defense phenotypes are mediated predominantly by male-induced changes of female behavior and reproductive physiology. As a consequence, adaptations by males to increase offense or defense may commonly influence the fitness of females via pleiotropy (Parker 1979;Wolfner 1997;Fowler and Partridge 1989;Rice 1996;Holland and Rice 1999;Civetta and Clark 2000;Prout and Clark 2000;Sawby and Hughes 2001;Chapman 2001;Chapman et al 2003). 3 Present address: Animal Ecology, Department of Ecology and Evolution, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala University, 752 36 Uppsala, Sweden; E-mail: urban.friberg@ebc.uu.se.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is worth noting that the female lifespan reducing effect that males had (henceforth, male harm to females) differed in the two exposure treatments, since the effects across male genotypes were uncorrelated in these two environments. I suggest that the effects seen in the limited exposure treatment were, at least on a relative scale, primarily due to the deleterious effects of the seminal fluid (see Chapman et al, 1995;Civetta and Clark, 2000;Sawby and Hughes, 2001). In the lifetime exposure treatment, in contrast, effects of the seminal fluid per se were no doubt augmented to a much higher degree by the costs of remating and male harassment (Fowler and Partridge, 1989;Partridge and Fowler, 1990).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, in fruit fly populations cultured under these conditions, with overlapping generations, the phenotypic correlation between lifespan and female fitness is very high, ranging from r = 0.67-0.76 (Friberg and Arnqvist, 2003;Kidwell and Malick, 1967;Partridge, 1988;Tantawy and Rakha, 1964). Second, most studies of sexually antagonistic effects of male adaptations in Drosophila have documented effects primarily on female lifespan rather than, for example, age-specific fecundities (Friberg and Arnqvist, 2003;Rice, 1996;Sawby and Hughes, 2001;Wigby and Chapman, 2004).…”
Section: Male and Female Influence On Female Lifespanmentioning
confidence: 99%
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