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SOURCES OF STOCHASTICITY IN MODELS OF SEX ALLOCATION IN SPATIALLY STRUCTURED POPULATIONS
Proulx, S.R., Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 17:924-930.
Abstract
There are many ways to include stochastic effects in models
of sex allocation evolution. These include variability
in the number of mating partners and fecundity
in a rich literature that goes back 20 years. The effects of variance
in the fecundity and number of mating partners have typically been considered
separately from the stochastic effects of mortality. However, I
show that these processes produce mathematically equivalent models with
subtly different biological details.
These scenarios differ in the way that information becomes available to individuals
because the parents often have information on mating partners while they are
making sex allocation decisions, but must make these decisions before brood mortality
takes place. This makes it possible to test which mechanism, stochastic mortality or
variation in mating partners, is responsible for observed sex ratios.
Alternatively, asymmetric variance between sexual functions can cause skewed sex allocation,
even in the absence of local mate competition. This allows the evolution of either female or
male biased sex ratios depending on which sexual function is more variable.
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© Copyright © 2004 European Society for Evolutionary Biology.
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