Abstract

The simultaneous optimization of clutch size and sex ratio is a tricky problem. Unless parameters such as host size or fecundity exist to pin down the optimal clutch size, this problem remains elusive to analytical analysis. This is because the fitness landscape with respect to dutch size and sex ratio does not have one single evolutionarify stable peak toward which the population can evolve. To solve this problem, I used a computer emulation to optimize both dutch size and sex ratio using externally ovipositing fig wasps as a model taxon. The simulation approach allows the use of integer numbers of eggs rather than assuming that females can produce any sex ratio between 0 and 1. When females have no information about the patches on which they oviposit, they produce either large dutches with a strong female bias or clutches of a single male egg. When females have complete knowledge of their oviposition site, a set of conditional substrategies is evohitionarih/ stable. Again, these substrategies are either large dutches with a female bias or dutches consisting of a single male egg. This dichotomous oviposition pattern results in unrelated males sharing a fig, a condition conducive to the evolution of fatal fighting. Selection on female oviposition strategies may therefore be an important driving force behind high levels of fighting observed between male fig wasps.

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