Abstract

In addition to the obvious role reproductive traits play in mating-system evolution, reproductive characters can also have critical ecological or life history consequences. In this study we examine the ecological consequences of mating for female cactophilic Drosophila to test different hypotheses about the processes driving divergence in reproductive characters. Comparisons between intra- and interpopulation matings suggest that population differences in mating benefits, namely increased desiccation resistance in mated females, is not solely attributable to either a male or female-specific reproductive trait. Instead, the results indicate that increased desiccation resistance is a product of a male-female postmating-prezygotic interactions. The results underscore that postmating-prezygotic interactions can serve as an arena for the evolution of male characters that confer substantial benefits to females, not just costs arising from sexual conflict. Variation in the relative benefits conferred by mating between intra- and interpopulation matings also suggests that the relationship between speciation and divergence in reproductive characters via male-female interaction will be difficult to predict.

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