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Behavioral Ecology Advance Access originally published online on January 4, 2007
Behavioral Ecology 2007 18(2):304-310; doi:10.1093/beheco/arl101
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Discrete genetic variation in mate choice and a condition-dependent preference function in the side-blotched lizard: implications for the formation and maintenance of coadapted gene complexes

Colin Bleaya and Barry Sinervob

a School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Woodland road, Bristol BS8 1UG, UK b Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA

Address correspondence to C. Bleay. E-mail: colin.bleay{at}Bristol.ac.uk.


   Abstract

Variation in female preference functions, both genotypic and phenotypic, has been largely ignored in the literature, despite its implications to the maintenance of genetic variation in populations and the resolution of the "Lek paradox." Polymorphic populations, such as in the side-blotched lizard, provide ideal study systems for its investigation, especially in the context of incipient processes of sympatric speciation. Females of the side blotch lizard exist in 2 genetically distinct morphs, yellow throated and orange throated, that experience disruptive selection for life history traits. Males express 3 throat color morphs, blue, orange, and yellow, that exhibit alternative strategies in intrasexual competition. We experimentally tested for female preference in triadic mate choice trials to identify the presence of discrete genetic and condition-dependent variation in female preference function. We found that females did in fact show genetic variation in preference for males but that females also operate a multicondition preference function dependent upon the genotype of the female and her state (number of clutches laid). Females exhibited positive assortative mating prior to the first clutch. However, prior to later clutches, orange females switched choice, preferring yellow males. These findings are discussed in relation to the maintenance of coadapted gene complexes within populations and the prevention of divergent directional selection (population bifurcation) by condition-dependent variation in mate choice.

Key words: coadapted gene complex, condition dependent, disruptive selection, genetic variation, lek paradox, mate choice, polymorphism, side-blotched lizard, sympatric speciation.

Received 29 July 2004; revised 31 August 2006; accepted 2 November 2006.


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