4.2 Article

Equal fecundity in asexual and sexual mollies (Poecilia)

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY OF FISHES
卷 88, 期 2, 页码 201-206

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10641-010-9630-0

关键词

Poeciliid; Asexual; Recombination; Fecundity

资金

  1. DFG [Schl 344-10-1, Schl 344-10-2]
  2. University of Oklahoma
  3. Basler Foundation for Biological Research
  4. Janggen-Poehn-Foundation
  5. Roche Research Foundation
  6. Wolfermann-Nageli-Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The evolution and maintenance of sexual reproduction is still one of the major unresolved problems in evolutionary biology. Sexual reproduction is fraught with a number of costs as compared to asexual reproduction. For example, sexuals have to produce males, which-given a 1:1 sex ratio-results in a two-fold advantage for asexuals that do not produce males. Consequently, asexuals will outperform and replace sexuals over time assuming everything else is equal. Nonetheless, a few cases of closely related asexuals and sexuals have been documented to coexist stably in natural systems. We investigated the presence of a two-fold cost in a unique system of three closely related fish species: the asexual Amazon Molly (Poecilia formosa), and two sexual species, Sailfin Molly (P. latipinna) and Atlantic Molly (P. mexicana). Amazon Molly reproduce gynogenetically (by sperm dependent parthenogenesis) and always coexist with one of the sexual species, which serves as sperm donor. In the laboratory, we compared reproductive output between P. formosa and P. mexicana as well as P. formosa and P. latipinna. We found no differences in the fecundity in either comparison of a sexual and the asexual species. Under the assumption of a 1:1 sex ratio, the asexual Amazon Molly should consequently have a full two-fold advantage and be able to outcompete sexuals over time. Hence, the coexistence of the species pairs in nature presents a paradox still to be solved.

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