Abstract

We model sex-structured population dynamics to analyze pairwise competition between groups differing both genetically and culturally. A sex-ratio allele is expressed in the heterogametic sex only, so that assumptions of Fisher’s analysis do not apply. Sex-ratio evolution drives cultural evolution of a group-associated trait governing mortality in the homogametic sex. The two-sex dynamics under resource limitation induces a strong Allee effect that depends on both sex ratio and cultural trait values. We describe the resulting threshold, separating extinction from positive growth, as a function of female and male densities. When initial conditions avoid extinction due to the Allee effect, different sex ratios cannot coexist; in our model, greater female allocation always invades and excludes a lesser allocation. But the culturally transmitted trait interacts with the sex ratio to determine the ecological consequences of successful invasion. The invading female allocation may permit population persistence at self-regulated equilibrium. For this case, the resident culture may be excluded, or may coexist with the invader culture. That is, a single sex-ratio allele in females and a cultural dimorphism in male mortality can persist; a low-mortality resident trait is maintained by father-to-son cultural transmission. Otherwise, the successfully invading female allocation excludes the resident allele and culture and then drives the population to extinction via a shortage of males. Finally, we show that the results obtained under homogeneous mixing hold, with caveats, in a spatially explicit model with local mating and diffusive dispersal in both sexes.

Highlights

  • Since Fisher’s [1] classic insight, sex-ratio evolution [2,3,4] and the impact of a given sex ratio on ecological dynamics [5,6,7,8] have remained central issues in population biology

  • Our models explore how a cultural trait influencing male mortality might govern the ecological consequences of sex-ratio evolution

  • Stability of the Resident Before we address the dynamics of competitive invasion, we must review [12] and establish conditions for an ecologically stable resident population

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Summary

Introduction

Since Fisher’s [1] classic insight, sex-ratio evolution [2,3,4] and the impact of a given sex ratio on ecological dynamics [5,6,7,8] have remained central issues in population biology. If a gene governing sex ratio occurs in the heterogametic sex only (females in the ZW system, and males in the XY system), the gene’s fitness depends only on the number of heterogametic offspring produced. The frequency of such a gene may advance rapidly, endangering population persistence [11,12]. Our study supposes that an extraordinary sex ratio’s ecological consequence, population persistence or extinction, depends on interaction with a culturally inherited trait

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