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1 May 2001 PARASITES AND THE EVOLUTION OF SELF-FERTILIZATION
Aneil F. Agrawal, Curtis M. Lively
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Abstract

Assuming all else is equal, an allele for selfing should spread when rare in an outcrossing population and rapidly reach fixation. Such an allele will not spread, however, if self-fertilization results in inbreeding depression so severe that the fitness of selfed offspring is less that half that of outcrossed offspring. Here we consider an ecological force that may also counter the spread of a selfing allele: coevolution with parasites. Computer simulations were conducted for four different genetic models governing the details of infection. Within each of these models, we varied both the level of selfing in the parasite and the level of male-gamete discounting in the host (i.e., the reduction in outcrossing fitness through male function due to the selfing allele). We then sought the equilibrium level of host selfing under the different conditions. The results show that, over a wide range of conditions, parasites can select for host reproductive strategies in which both selfed and outcrossed progeny are produced (mixed mating). In addition, mixed mating, where it exits, tends to be biased toward selfing.

Corresponding Editor: P. Jarne

Aneil F. Agrawal and Curtis M. Lively "PARASITES AND THE EVOLUTION OF SELF-FERTILIZATION," Evolution 55(5), 869-879, (1 May 2001). https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2001)055[0869:PATEOS]2.0.CO;2
Received: 22 May 2000; Accepted: 1 December 2000; Published: 1 May 2001
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KEYWORDS
Breeding-system evolution
Cross-fertilization
mixed mating
parasites
red queen hypothesis
self-fertilization
sexual reproduction
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