No evidence of an MHC-based female mating preference in great reed warblers

Westerdahl, Helena (2004). No evidence of an MHC-based female mating preference in great reed warblers. Molecular Ecology, 13, (8), 2465 - 2470
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DOI:
| Published | English
Authors:
Westerdahl, Helena
Department:
MEMEG
Molecular Ecology and Evolution Lab
Project:
Long-term study of great reed warblers
Research Group:
Molecular Ecology and Evolution Lab
Abstract:
Female mate-choice based on genetic compatibility is an area of growing interest. The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes are likely candidates for such mate-choice since these highly polymorphic genes may both increase offspring viability and also provide direct cues for mate-choice. In great reed warblers, females actively choose a breeding partner out of a handful of males that they visit and evaluate; thus, female preference for compatible or heterozygous MHC genes could have evolved. Here, I investigate whether great reed warbler females preferentially mate with males with dissimilar MHC class I alleles or with males that are heterozygous at MHC class I. Despite favourable conditions, a thorough screening method and a large sample size, there was no evidence of an MHC-based female mating preference based on either genetic compatibility or heterozygosity in this population. Power analyses of the data sets revealed that relatively small differences (15% and 8%, respectively) between true and random pairs should have been detected.
ISSN:
0962-1083
LUP-ID:
5fc9887b-8cdc-48f6-af35-7d84161faf54 | Link: https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/5fc9887b-8cdc-48f6-af35-7d84161faf54 | Statistics

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