The common fruit fly (stock image). Too much
male sexual attention harms attractive females, according to a new
Australian and Canadian study on fruit flies.
Credit: © tomatito26 / Fotolia
Associate Professor Steve Chenoweth from The University of
Queensland's School of Biological Sciences said the study showed that
male harassment of females hampered the species' ability to adapt to new
environmental conditions.
"We found that sexually attractive females were overwhelmed by male suitors," he said.
"Female fruit flies with superior genes that allow them to lay more
eggs were so attractive to male suitors they spent most of the time
fending off male suitors rather than actually laying eggs.
"The end result was that these supposedly 'superior' genes could not be passed on to the next generation."
The genetic study found a large number of genes appeared to be a double-edged sword for females.
The genes increased their egg-laying ability but with the unfortunate
side effect of boosting sexual attractiveness to a level where males
wouldn't leave them alone.
The researchers allowed different groups of flies to adapt to a new environment in the lab for 13 generations.
They manipulated the number of potential mates that males and females
had in each group, thereby controlling the potential harassment rate.
At the end of the experiment, researchers sequenced the genomes of
the flies and found a number of genes that became more common when
harassment was not allowed, but these same genes became rare when male
harassment was allowed to occur as usual.
As such, increased male attention held the population back and stopped the flies from adapting as well as they could.
Associate Professor Chenoweth said the study's results were significant.
"We have known for some time of these harmful interactions between males and females," he said.
"However, we hadn't realised there may be a large number of genes
fueling the interactions, or that these types of genes hamper a species'
ability to adapt to new conditions."
Associate Professor Chenoweth heads a laboratory in UQ that uses new
genomic technology to answer questions of evolutionary behaviour.
He said future directions for the study included pinpointing the
exact types of gene functions involved and to understanding the broader
consequences of male-female interactions and their relevance to the
evolutionary history of other species.
Story Source:
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University of Queensland.
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