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Cross-sex genetic correlation does not extend to sexual size dimorphism in spiders
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Eva?TurkEmail author  Matja??Kuntner
Institution:1.Institute of Biology,Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts,Ljubljana,Slovenia;2.Department of Entomology, National Museum of Natural History,Smithsonian Institution,Washington,USA;3.Centre for Behavioural Ecology and Evolution (CBEE), College of Life Sciences,Hubei University,Wuhan,China;4.National Institute of Biology,Ljubljana,Slovenia;5.Faculty of Mathematics, Natural Sciences and Information Technologies,University of Primorska,Koper,Slovenia
Abstract:Males and females are often subjected to different selection pressures for homologous traits, resulting in sex-specific optima. Because organismal attributes usually share their genetic architectures, sex-specific selection may lead to intralocus sexual conflict. Evolution of sexual dimorphism may resolve this conflict, depending on the degree of cross-sex genetic correlation (r MF) and the strength of sex-specific selection. In theory, high r MF implies that sexes largely share the genetic base for a given trait and are consequently sexually monomorphic, while low r MF indicates a sex-specific genetic base and sexual dimorphism. Here, we broadly test this hypothesis on three spider species with varying degrees of female-biased sexual size dimorphism, Larinioides sclopetarius (sexual dimorphism index, SDI?=?0.85), Nuctenea umbratica (SDI?=?0.60), and Zygiella x-notata (SDI?=?0.46). We assess r MF via same-sex and opposite-sex heritability estimates. We find moderate body mass heritability but no obvious patterns in sex-specific heritability. Against the prediction, the degree of sexual size dimorphism is unrelated to the relative strength of same-sex versus opposite-sex heritability. Our results do not support the hypothesis that sexual size dimorphism is negatively associated with r MF. We conclude that sex-specific genetic architecture may not be necessary for the evolution of a sexually dimorphic trait.
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