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The coevolution of male and female genitalia in a mammal: A quantitative genetic insight
Authors:Gonçalo I André  Renée C Firman  Leigh W Simmons
Institution:Centre for Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences (M092), The University of Western Australia, Crawley, 6009 Australia
Abstract:Male genitalia are among the most phenotypically diverse morphological traits, and sexual selection is widely accepted as being responsible for their evolutionary divergence. Studies of house mice suggest that the shape of the baculum (penis bone) affects male reproductive fitness and experimentally imposed postmating sexual selection has been shown to drive divergence in baculum shape across generations. Much less is known of the morphology of female genitalia and its coevolution with male genitalia. In light of this, we used a paternal half-sibling design to explore patterns of additive genetic variation and covariation underlying baculum shape and female vaginal tract size in house mice (Mus musculus domesticus). We applied a landmark-based morphometrics approach to measure baculum size and shape in males and the length of the vaginal tract and width of the cervix in females. Our results reveal significant additive genetic variation in house mouse baculum morphology and cervix width, as well as evidence for genetic covariation between male and female genital measures. Our data thereby provide novel insight into the potential for the coevolutionary divergence of male and female genital traits in a mammal.
Keywords:Coevolution  genital morphology  house mouse  os penis  quantitative genetics
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