TY - JOUR
T1 - The contribution of extra-pair paternity to the variation in lifetime and age-specific male reproductive success in a socially monogamous species
AU - Pant, Sara Raj
AU - Versteegh, Maaike A
AU - Hammers, Martijn
AU - Burke, Terry
AU - Dugdale, Hannah L
AU - Richardson, David S
AU - Komdeur, Jan
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the Republic of Seychelles Department of Environment and the Seychelles Bureau of Standards for permission to undertake this research and permits to export samples. We are grateful to Nature Seychelles for the opportunity to conduct fieldwork on Cousin Island and their support with logistics. We thank all the many enthusiastic fieldworkers who have contributed to the long‐term data collection in the Seychelles warbler project, Owen Howison for maintenance of the Seychelles warbler database, and Marco van der Velde for microsatellite genotyping. We are grateful to Matthew Dean, Michela Busana, and two anonymous reviewers for valuable comments on the manuscript. Our work was supported by a NERC grant (NE/ B504106/1) to TB and DSR, NWO Rubicon (825.09.013), NERC fellowship (NE/I021748/1), Lucie Burgers Foundation and KNAW Schure Beijerinck Poppings grant (SBP2013/04) to HLD, NWO visitors grant (040.11.232) to JK and HLD, NERC grant (NE/ P011284/1) to HLD and DSR, NWO grants (854.11.003 and 823.01.014) to JK and DSR, and NERC grants (NE/F02083X/1 and NE/K005502/1) to DSR. MH was supported by a VENI fellowship from NWO (863.15.020).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Evolution © 2022 The Society for the Study of Evolution.
PY - 2022/5
Y1 - 2022/5
N2 - In socially monogamous species, extra-pair paternity (EPP) is predicted to increase variance in male reproductive success beyond that resulting from genetic monogamy, thus increasing the 'opportunity for selection' (maximum strength of selection that can act on traits). This prediction is challenging to investigate in wild populations because lifetime reproduction data are often incomplete. Moreover, age-specific variances in reproduction have been rarely quantified. We analysed 21 years of near-complete social and genetic reproduction data from an insular population of Seychelles warblers (Acrocephalus sechellensis). We quantified EPP's contribution to lifetime and age-specific opportunities for selection in males. We compared the variance in male genetic reproductive success (RS) vs. social ('apparent') reproductive success (RSap ) to assess if EPP increased the opportunity for selection over that resulting from genetic monogamy. Despite not causing a statistically significant excess (19%) of the former over the latter, EPP contributed substantially (27%) to the variance in lifetime RS, similarly to within-pair paternity (WPP, 39%) and to the positive WPP-EPP covariance (34%). Partitioning the opportunity for selection into age-specific (co)variance components, showed that EPP also provided a substantial contribution at most ages, varying with age. Therefore, despite possibly not playing the main role in shaping sexual selection in Seychelles warblers, EPP provided a substantial contribution to the lifetime and age-specific opportunity for selection, which can influence evolutionary processes in age-structured populations. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
AB - In socially monogamous species, extra-pair paternity (EPP) is predicted to increase variance in male reproductive success beyond that resulting from genetic monogamy, thus increasing the 'opportunity for selection' (maximum strength of selection that can act on traits). This prediction is challenging to investigate in wild populations because lifetime reproduction data are often incomplete. Moreover, age-specific variances in reproduction have been rarely quantified. We analysed 21 years of near-complete social and genetic reproduction data from an insular population of Seychelles warblers (Acrocephalus sechellensis). We quantified EPP's contribution to lifetime and age-specific opportunities for selection in males. We compared the variance in male genetic reproductive success (RS) vs. social ('apparent') reproductive success (RSap ) to assess if EPP increased the opportunity for selection over that resulting from genetic monogamy. Despite not causing a statistically significant excess (19%) of the former over the latter, EPP contributed substantially (27%) to the variance in lifetime RS, similarly to within-pair paternity (WPP, 39%) and to the positive WPP-EPP covariance (34%). Partitioning the opportunity for selection into age-specific (co)variance components, showed that EPP also provided a substantial contribution at most ages, varying with age. Therefore, despite possibly not playing the main role in shaping sexual selection in Seychelles warblers, EPP provided a substantial contribution to the lifetime and age-specific opportunity for selection, which can influence evolutionary processes in age-structured populations. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
KW - Age-specific reproduction
KW - extra-pair paternity
KW - lifetime reproductive success
KW - opportunity for selection
KW - sexual selection
KW - Seychelles warbler
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85127686819&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/evo.14473
DO - 10.1111/evo.14473
M3 - Article
C2 - 35325482
SN - 1558-5646
VL - 76
SP - 915
EP - 930
JO - Evolution
JF - Evolution
IS - 5
ER -