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Science
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Sexual Selection and its Effect on the Fixation of an Asexual Clone
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Marcel Salathé
Biology Letters,
2, 36-538 ( 2006)
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Abstract
Sexual selection is a powerful and ubiquitous force in sexual populations.
It has recently been argued that sexual selection can eliminate the twofold cost of
sex even with low genomic mutation rates. By means of differential male mating success, deleterious
mutations in males become more deleterious than in females, and it has been shown that sexual selection
can drastically reduce the mutational load in a sexual population, with or without any form of
epistasis. However, any mechanism that claims to maintain sexual reproduction must be able to
prevent the fixation of an asexual mutant clone with a twofold fitness advantage. Here, I show that
despite very strong sexual selection, the fixation of an asexual mutant cannot be prevented under
reasonable genomic mutation rates. Sexual selection can have a strong effect on the average mutational
load in a sexual population, but as it cannot prevent the fixation of an asexual mutant, it is unlikely
to play a key role on the maintenance of sexual reproduction.
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