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Evolutionary benefits of sex in difficult places

(麻豆淫院) -- University of Auckland scientists have provided the first experimental explanation of how sexual reproduction helps species adapt in challenging real-world environments, solving a classic conundrum in evolutionary biology.

鈥淎ccording to classic evolutionary , should actually retard species鈥 ability to adapt to complex environments and in the long run prevent the evolution of new species,鈥 explains lead researcher Dr Mat Goddard. 鈥淏ut in the real world, sex is a highly successful strategy that doesn鈥檛 prevent new species from evolving, so what we see in nature doesn鈥檛 tally with the theory. Our experimental work provides the first explanation for this and supports an alternate evolutionary theory.鈥

As organisms adapt to environmental challenges they accumulate genetic changes that help them survive. Since sexual reproduction produces offspring with a mix of genes from both parents, in theory, sex between organisms adapting to different environments should be detrimental. It would produce offspring poorly adapted to either environment because helpful genes are diluted and, according to classic theory, genes that are beneficial in one situation are detrimental in another.

To test the theory the researchers developed special yeast that could be switched from asexual to sexual forms. Two groups of yeast grown in different environments were allowed to sexually reproduce, to see whether this slowed the species鈥 simultaneous adaptation to both environments as predicted by the theory.

In fact, sexual reproduction proved advantageous, allowing more rapid adaptation to both environments even when there was interbreeding between the two groups. The results were consistent with a little-known alternate theory, which states that genes that confer a benefit in one environment are not necessarily detrimental in another and would therefore not disadvantage the offspring of mixed parents.

鈥淚f the classic theory were true, then any breeding between groups of organisms adapting to different environments would dramatically slow their evolution. So to explain how new species evolve, classical theorists have had to come up with all sorts of convoluted scenarios, like the emergence of 鈥榤agic genes鈥 for mate choice to prevent sexual reproduction between populations,鈥 says Dr Goddard.

鈥淥ur work is much more consistent with what we see in the real world. It supports an alternate theory, in which organisms adapting to different environmental niches can live alongside one another and interbreed occasionally but this doesn鈥檛 compromise their evolution or the eventual development of new , in fact sex enhances this process.鈥

The research was funded by a Marsden grant and a University of Auckland PhD scholarship to Jeremy Gray, and has been published online today in the journal Ecology Letters.

Journal information: Ecology Letters

Citation: Evolutionary benefits of sex in difficult places (2012, June 14) retrieved 6 May 2025 from /news/2012-06-evolutionary-benefits-sex-difficult.html
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