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Genetics, Vol. 160, 975-982, March 2002, Copyright © 2002

Selection and Maintenance of Androdioecy in Caenorhabditis elegans

Andrew D. Stewarta and Patrick C. Phillipsa
a Department of Biology, University of Texas, Arlington, Texas 76019-0498

Corresponding author: Patrick C. Phillips, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1210., pphil{at}darkwing.uoregon.edu (E-mail)

Communicating editor: D. CHARLESWORTH

Caenorhabditis elegans is an androdioecious nematode composed of selfing hermaphrodites and rare males. A model of male maintenance demonstrates that selfing rates in hermaphrodites cannot be too high or else the frequency of males will be driven down to the rate of spontaneous nondisjunction of the X chromosome. After their outcrossing ability is assessed, males are found to skirt the frequency range in which they would be maintained. When male maintenance is directly assessed by elevating male frequency and observing the frequency change through time, males are gradually eliminated from the population. Males, therefore, appear to reproduce at a rate just below that necessary for them to be maintained. Populations polymorphic for a mutation (fog-2) that effectively changes hermaphrodites into females demonstrate that there is strong selection against dioecy. Factors such as variation in male mating ability and inbreeding depression could potentially lead to the long-term maintenance of males.





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