Outcrossing increases resistance against coevolving parasites

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Abstract

Despite substantial costs, biparental sex is the dominant mode of reproduction across plant and animal taxa. The Red Queen hypothesis (RQH) posits that coevolutionary interactions with parasites can favor biparental sex in hosts, despite the costs. In support of the RQH, previous studies found that coevolutionary interactions with virulent bacterial parasites maintained high outcrossing rates in populations of the androdioecious nematode host Caenorhabditis elegans . Here we test three non-mutually exclusive mechanisms that could explain how coevolving parasites maintain outcrossing rates in C. elegans hosts: 1) short-term parasite exposure induces plastic increases in the hosts’ propensity to outcross, 2) hosts evolve increased outcrossing propensity in response to selection imposed by coevolving parasites, and 3) outcrossed offspring incur less parasite-mediated fitness loss than selfed offspring, increasing host male frequencies and opportunities for outcrossing. We find no evidence that parasites cause plastic or evolved changes in host outcrossing propensity. However, parental outcrossing significantly increases survival of host offspring in the F2 generation when exposed to a coevolving parasite. Hence, coevolving parasites maintain outcrossing in host populations by selecting against selfed offspring, rather than by inducing changes in the propensity to outcross.

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