Extensive fitness variation for sexually antagonistic characters has been detected in nature. However, current population genetic theory suggests that sexual antagonism is unlikely to play a major role in the maintenance of variation. We present a two-locus model of sexual antagonism that is capable of explaining greater fitness variance at equilibrium than previous single-locus models. The second genetic locus provides additional fitness variance in two complementary ways. First, linked loci can maintain gene variants that are lost in single-locus models of evolution, expanding the opportunity for polymorphism. Second, linkage disequilibrium results between any two sexually antagonistic genes, producing an excess of high- and low-fitness haplotypes. Our results uncover a unique contribution of conflicting selection pressures to the maintenance of variation, which simpler models that neglect genetic architecture overlook. © 2010 The Author(s). Evolution © 2010 The Society for the Study of Evolution.
CITATION STYLE
Patten, M. M., Haig, D., & Úbeda, F. (2010). Fitness variation due to sexual antagonism and linkage disequilibrium. Evolution, 64(12), 3638–3642. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.2010.01100.x
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