Abstract

ABSTRACT: Alternative mating tactics appear to evolve when sexual selection is strong. Because such conditions are usually observed in species with polygynous or polyandrous mating systems, alternative mating tactics in monogamous mating systems are seldom documented and are poorly understood. In prairie voles, Microtus ochrogaster, a species widely known for forming monogamous pair-bonds, the expression of territoriality within each sex is dimorphic, and includes non-territorial “wanderers” as well as territorial “residents.” To explore the variance in fitness, measured in offspring numbers, among breeding individuals expressing these alternative mating tactics, we compiled parentage data over three years for male and female prairie voles from natural populations in Indiana and Kansas, USA. We found that: (1) the average fitnesses of males and females within each population were identical when adjusted by the sex ratio; (2) the variance in fitness in male and female prairie voles was comparable to that of many highly polygynous species; (3) The average fitnesses of male tactics, and of female tactics, were equivalent within and among years within each location; (4) consistent with negative frequency-dependent selection acting on mating phenotypes, the between-tactic variance in fitness for male and female mating tactics decreased with increasing study duration; (5) consistent with negative assortative mating, resident males and wanderer females produced offspring primarily in monogamous partnerships, whereas wanderer males and resident females produced offspring primarily in polygamous partnerships. Our results show that the conditions necessary for the persistence of alternative mating tactics are indistinguishable from those for phenotypically less flexible alternative mating strategies, and that alternative mating tactics can evolve in both sexes in monogamous species when fitness variance within each sex is large.

Highlights

  • IntroductionAlternative mating tactics (AMTs) describe the discontinuous distribution of behavioral or developmental traits expressed in the context of intrasexual competition

  • Alternative Mating Tactics: Definitions and Patterns of ExpressionAlternative mating tactics (AMTs) describe the discontinuous distribution of behavioral or developmental traits expressed in the context of intrasexual competition

  • Our results show that alternative mating tactics can and do evolve in socially monogamous species

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Summary

Introduction

Alternative mating tactics (AMTs) describe the discontinuous distribution of behavioral or developmental traits expressed in the context of intrasexual competition. Because variation in these mate-seeking traits is expressed more often in males than in females, most sources agree that polymorphic mating tactics allow individuals to take advantage of temporally available. Few studies have investigated the fitness outcomes of polymorphic mating phenotypes in females (lizards, Vercken et al, 2007; pea crabs, Prather and Shuster, 2015)

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