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Female Lizards Control Genetics

April 5, 2010

Be faithful in small things because it is in them that your strength lies. Mother Teresa's words echo throughout the world. They ring particularly true in the biological kingdom among brown anole lizards, as evidenced in research detailed in Science.


Dartmouth Univ. researchers Ryan Calsbeek and Bob Cox study male and female brown anole lizards in the Bahamas. As the researchers point out, one of the most striking features of this species is that the males and females actually look like two entirely different species: the males are two to three times larger than the tiny females, weighing just 1 to 2 g apiece.

By measuring the lizards' natural and sexual selection, they learned what traits and, by extension, what genes make a high-quality female--i.e., one with high survival and reproductive success. They also learned the traits and genes of a high-quality male are very different from a high-quality female. This is particularly true for body size.

Natural selection favors large males and small females. As lead author Cox puts it, "In an evolutionary sense, what's good for the goose is not always good for the gander." In other words, a double standard is alive and well.

This could present a challenge for females. Mating with a high-quality male in the population is great if he produces sons, but studies of other species have shown that the best males often make the worst daughters. This cancels out the advantage of mating with the best males in terms of daughters' genetic fitness.

But the researchers discovered something remarkable: female anoles appear to have solved the evolutionary problem of getting preferred genes to a specific gender. Females mate with several males and then make more sons with the sperm from big males, and more daughters with sperm from small males.

The findings are unique as they actually show sex-ratio bias empowers the mother in an evolutionary sense, giving her an ability to produce sons with sperm from large males that survive better than sons produced with sperm from small males.

"This species has figured out a clever way to pass on genes with gender-specific effects on fitness," says Cox, "Usually, when natural selection pulls genes in different directions from each gender, the species faces an evolutionary dilemma. But these lizards have solved this puzzle, they've figured out how to get the right genes into the right gender."

"As we predicted, the survival of the male offspring increased if they had large fathers," said Calsbeek. "But we found that the survival of the daughers was not influenced by the size of the father. This suggests that the genetic benefits of large size are specific to sons."

In species where males are much larger and more aggressive than females, such as anoles, people often assume that males ultimately have control over mating and fertilization. One interesting implication of the study is that, even though the large males have physical control over mating, it's the tiny females that appear to have control over fertilization. Even when the largest males mate with a female, she may only use their sperm when it is beneficial to her and her offspring.

In the end, this could actually end up benefiting both sexes, because large males will benefit the most when they produce sons, whereas small males will benefit the most when they produce daughters. On the whole, this pattern resolves the genetic tug-of-war over body size by providing a solution that works best for both sexes.

Source: Dartmouth University


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Editor's Corner

michelle
Michelle Longo
Asst. Managing Editor

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