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One function of sex — an empirical study of genetic and ecological variation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2012

N. Gilbert
Affiliation:
Genetics Field Station, University of Cambridge, 219d Huntingdon Road, Cambridge CB3 0DL, United Kingdom
D.A. Raworth*
Affiliation:
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, P.O. Box 1000, Agassiz, British Columbia, Canada V0M 1A0
G.R. Allen
Affiliation:
School of Agricultural Science and The Tasmanian Institute of Agricultural Reseach, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 54, Hobart, Tasmania 7001, Australia
*
2 Corresponding author (e-mail: [email protected]).

Abstract

The question “why sex?” is a longstanding fundamental puzzle in biology. Although there may be several answers, no satisfactory theory has emerged. We present an argument in favour of one function of sex, derived from a study of the population genetics and ecology of the cabbage butterfly, Pieris rapae (L.) (Lepidoptera: Pieridae), on three continents between 1984 and 2009, and from previously published studies of other organisms. We provide evidence that responsiveness to directional selection (RDS), a measure related to “narrow-sense heritability”, can be dramatically reduced by truncation selection in a single generation and rapidly restored within a few generations. Viewing a population as a collection of sexual families, we show that rapid restoration of RDS after truncation selection is essential to maintain population variance. The only known mechanism that will rapidly restore RDS is sexual recombination. We therefore conclude that in P. rapae, sex restores the genetic variation that a population needs to match unpredictable environmental variation, despite selection tending to reduce that genetic variation.

Résumé

La question de savoir à quoi sert la sexualité demeure depuis longtemps une énigme fondamentale de la biologie. Bien qu’il puisse y avoir plusieurs réponses, il n’est apparu aucune théorie satisfaisante. Nous présentons un argument qui appuie une des fonctions de la sexualité tiré d'une étude de la génétique de population et de l'écologie de la piéride du chou, Pieris rapae (L.) (Lepidoptera : Pieridae), sur trois continents, de 1984 à 2009, ainsi que d'études antérieures sur d'autres organismes. Nous apportons des données qui indiquent que capacité de réagir à une sélection directionnelle (RDS), une mesure reliée à l'«héritabilité dans le sens strict», peut être réduite de façon spectaculaire par une sélection par troncature en une seule génération et restaurée en quelques générations. Considérant la population comme un ensemble de familles sexuelles, nous montrons que la restauration rapide de la RDS après une sélection par troncature est essentielle pour maintenir la variance de la population. Le seul mécanisme connu qui peut restaurer rapidement la RDS est la recombinaison sexuelle. Nous concluons donc que, chez P. rapae, la sexualité restaure la variation génétique dont la population a besoin pour contrer la variation environnementale imprévisible, malgré que la sélection tende à réduire la variation génétique.

[Traduit par la Rédaction]

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 2010

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