To study the evolutionary role played by differential male and female fertility (sexual asymmetry) both between individuals and over the life span within single individuals, the terms ''intrinsic male fertility'' and ''intrinsic female fertility'' are introduced. With the help of these terms, the concept of sexual asymmetry can be made precise and its effect on the establishment and maintenance of genetic polymorphisms can be analyzed. The main conclusions are: (1) any mutant causing a modification of the male fertility parameters which result in an increased intrinsic male fertility becomes established; (2) a corollary of this is that age-specific sexual asymmetry, as results from alternating degrees of female and male flowering in successive reproduction cycles, for example, has only secondary effects on the initial growth rate; (3) under the biologically reasonable premise that modifications of life histories result from reallocation of fixed net reproduction (whether female, male, or both in arbitrary proportions) to earlier ages is evolutionarily successful in growing but not in declining populations; shifts of net reproduction to later ages have opposite consequences.
CITATION STYLE
Gregorius, H. R. (1991). Age-dependent sexually asymmetric selection: The use of intrinsic values. Genetics, 129(3), 949–956. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/129.3.949
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