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Letter
Nature 439, 201-203 (12 January 2006) | doi:10.1038/nature04260; Received 14 April 2005; Accepted 21 September 2005
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Outbred embryos rescue inbred half-siblings in mixed-paternity broods of live-bearing females
Jeanne A. Zeh1 & David W. Zeh1
- Department of Biology and Program in Ecology, Evolution and Conservation Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada 89557, USA
Correspondence to: Jeanne A. Zeh1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to J.A.Z. (Email: jaz@unr.edu).
Abstract
Females commonly mate with more than one male1, and polyandry has been shown to increase reproductive success in many species2, 3, 4. Insemination by multiple males shifts the arena for sexual selection from the external environment to the female reproductive tract, where sperm competition or female choice of sperm could bias fertilization against sperm from genetically inferior5 or genetically incompatible males6, 7. Evidence that polyandry can be a strategy for avoiding incompatibility comes from studies showing that inbreeding cost is reduced in some egg-laying species by postcopulatory mechanisms that favour fertilization by sperm from unrelated males8, 9, 10. In viviparous (live-bearing) species, inbreeding not only reduces offspring genetic quality but might also disrupt feto-maternal interactions that are crucial for normal embryonic development11, 12, 13. Here we show that polyandry in viviparous pseudoscorpions reduces inbreeding cost not through paternity-biasing mechanisms favouring outbred offspring, but rather because outbred embryos exert a rescuing effect on inbred half-siblings in mixed-paternity broods. The benefits of polyandry may thus be more complex for live-bearing females than for females that lay eggs.
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Post-mating sexual selection increases lifetime fitness of polyandrous females in the wildNature Letters to Editor (02 Nov 2006)
Polyandrous females avoid costs of inbreedingNature Letters to Editor (03 Jan 2002)
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Parental care and mating behaviour of polyandrous dunnocks Prunella modularis related to paternity by DNA fingerprintingNature Letters to Editor (16 Mar 1989)
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