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Extraordinary Sex Ratios: Cultural Effects on Ecological Consequences

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  • Ferenc Molnár Jr
  • Thomas Caraco
  • Gyorgy Korniss

Abstract

We model sex-structured population dynamics to analyze pairwise competition between groups differing both genetically and culturally. A sex-ratio allele is expressed in the heterogametic sex only, so that assumptions of Fisher’s analysis do not apply. Sex-ratio evolution drives cultural evolution of a group-associated trait governing mortality in the homogametic sex. The two-sex dynamics under resource limitation induces a strong Allee effect that depends on both sex ratio and cultural trait values. We describe the resulting threshold, separating extinction from positive growth, as a function of female and male densities. When initial conditions avoid extinction due to the Allee effect, different sex ratios cannot coexist; in our model, greater female allocation always invades and excludes a lesser allocation. But the culturally transmitted trait interacts with the sex ratio to determine the ecological consequences of successful invasion. The invading female allocation may permit population persistence at self-regulated equilibrium. For this case, the resident culture may be excluded, or may coexist with the invader culture. That is, a single sex-ratio allele in females and a cultural dimorphism in male mortality can persist; a low-mortality resident trait is maintained by father-to-son cultural transmission. Otherwise, the successfully invading female allocation excludes the resident allele and culture and then drives the population to extinction via a shortage of males. Finally, we show that the results obtained under homogeneous mixing hold, with caveats, in a spatially explicit model with local mating and diffusive dispersal in both sexes.

Suggested Citation

  • Ferenc Molnár Jr & Thomas Caraco & Gyorgy Korniss, 2012. "Extraordinary Sex Ratios: Cultural Effects on Ecological Consequences," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 7(8), pages 1-12, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0043364
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0043364
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Jan Komdeur & Serge Daan & Joost Tinbergen & Christa Mateman, 1997. "Extreme adaptive modification in sex ratio of the Seychelles warbler's eggs," Nature, Nature, vol. 385(6616), pages 522-525, February.
    2. Elizabeth V. Lonsdorf & Lynn E. Eberly & Anne E. Pusey, 2004. "Sex differences in learning in chimpanzees," Nature, Nature, vol. 428(6984), pages 715-716, April.
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