The Sexual Cascade and the Rise of Pre-Ejaculatory (Darwinian) Sexual Selection,Sex Roles,and Sexual Conflict |
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Authors: | Geoff A. Parker |
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Affiliation: | Department of Evolution, Ecology and Behaviour, Institute of Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 7ZB, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | After brief historic overviews of sexual selection and sexual conflict, I argue that pre-ejaculatory sexual selection (the form of sexual selection discussed by Darwin) arose at a late stage in an inevitable succession of transitions flowing from the early evolution of syngamy to the evolution of copulation and sex roles. If certain conditions were met, this “sexual cascade” progressed inevitably, if not, sexual strategy remained fixed at a given stage. Prolonged evolutionary history of intense sperm competition/selection under external fertilization preceded the rise of advanced mobility, which generated pre-ejaculatory sexual selection, followed on land by internal fertilization and reduced sperm competition in the form of postcopulatory sexual selection. I develop a prospective model of the early evolution of mobility, which, as Darwin realized, was the catalyst for pre-ejaculatory sexual selection. Stages in the cascade should be regarded as consequential rather than separate phenomena and, as such, invalidate much current opposition to Darwin–Bateman sex roles. Potential for sexual conflict occurs throughout, greatly increasing later in the cascade, reaching its peak under precopulatory sexual selection when sex roles become highly differentiated.Sexual selection and sexual conflict are vast fields in evolutionary biology; when possible, here, I refer to reviews. I begin with brief general historic overviews of sexual selection and sexual conflict; more detail can be found in Andersson (1994), Simmons (2001), Chapman et al. (2003), and Arnqvist and Rowe (2005). Much of the current state of the field of sexual conflict is covered in this collection.My principal aim, however, is to outline how sexual selection and sexual conflict have changed through evolutionary time, from mostly gamete competition in early unicellular eukaryotes, intense sperm competition in ancestral sessile and relatively immobile organisms, to both pre-ejaculatory (Darwinian) and postejaculatory sexual selection. These transitions in the evolution of sexual strategy arise as logical consequences whenever certain successive conditions are met, and together form what may be termed the “sexual cascade.” |
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