Genetic evidence for female-biased dispersal and gene flow in a polygynous primate.


Autoria(s): Hammond R.L.; Lawson Handley L.J.; Winney B.J.; Bruford M.W.; Perrin N.
Data(s)

01/02/2006

Resumo

Many models of sex-biased dispersal predict that the direction of sex-bias depends upon a species' mating system. In agreement with this, almost all polygynous mammals show male-biased dispersal whereas largely monogamous birds show female-biased dispersal (FBD). The hamadryas baboon (Papio hamadryas hamadryas) is polygynous and so dispersal is predicted to be male biased, as is found in all other baboon subspecies, but there are conflicting field data showing both female and male dispersal. Using 19 autosomal genetic markers genotyped in baboons from four Saudi Arabian populations, we found strong evidence for FBD in post-dispersal adults but not, as expected, in pre-dispersal infants and young juveniles, when we compared male and female: population structure (F(st)), inbreeding (F(is)), relatedness (r), and the mean assignment index (mAIc). Furthermore, we found evidence for female-biased gene flow as population genetic structure (F(st)), was about four times higher for the paternally inherited Y, than for either autosomal markers or for maternally inherited mtDNA. These results contradict the direction of sex-bias predicted by the mating system and show that FBD has evolved recently from an ancestral state of male-biased dispersal. We suggest that the cost-benefit balance of dispersal to males and females is tightly linked to the unique hierarchical social structure of hamadryas baboons and that dispersal and social organization have coevolved.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_C2F8F003A34B

isbn:0962-8452[print]

pmid:16615216

doi:10.1098/rspb.2005.3257

isiid:000235238700015

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B Biological Sciences, vol. 273, no. 1585, pp. 479-484

Palavras-Chave #Animal Migration; Animals; DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics; Female; Gene Flow/genetics; Male; Microsatellite Repeats/genetics; Papio hamadryas/genetics; Saudi Arabia; Sexual Behavior, Animal; Y Chromosome/genetics
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article