"Sex is hard to explain," writes Michael Brothurst in a recent
article in the journal Science. Like others in his field, Brothurst, who
studies the evolution of sexual reproduction at the University of
Liverpool, doesn't "get" men.
"Since males can't reproduce by themselves and often contribute
nothing except genes to their offspring, a population of asexual females
can grow at double the rate of a population that reproduces sexually,"
he writes.
Why, then, do males exist at all? Why do most plants and animals have two sexes — that is, two sexes who have sex with each other — instead of just one?
The most likely explanation is known as the Red Queen hypothesis,
named after the monarch in Lewis Carroll's "Through the Looking Glass."
In that novella, Alice and the Red Queen hold a race in which they run
in place but never get anywhere. Somewhat analogously, the Red Queen
hypothesis holds that organisms and the parasites that live on them are
running a race in which they constantly evolve in response to each other's genetic mutations , maintaining an overall balance. [Read: Sex Stats: Virgins On the Rise ]
As parasites evolve to take advantage of the weaknesses of a typical
host organism, Brothurst explains, host organisms with rare versions of
genes, known as alleles, are less susceptible to the parasites, and so
stand a better chance of surviving to their reproductive age; likewise,
their offspring are endowed with these advantageous alleles. As a
result, over generations these organisms' rare alleles become more
common in the population, so parasites start evolving to take them on.
At that point new unusual alleles begin to flourish among the hosts.
Sex, the theory holds, gives host organisms a leg-up on this
evolutionary treadmill. "This continual selection for rarity favors
sexual reproduction over asexual reproduction; sexual recombination
allows hosts to reshuffle their pack of alleles and generate new, rare
combinations in their offspring," Brothurst writes.
Evidence in favor of the Red Queen hypothesis comes from many walks
of life. Among freshwater snails that can reproduce both sexually or
asexually, more males (and thus more sexual reproduction) occur in
shallow areas where the snails are more likely to get infected by
flukes, a type of parasite. In Brothurst's words, "This suggests that
infection promotes sex."
However, up until now, researchers didn't know for sure whether
flukes (to use the previous example) are actually best adapted to their
snail hosts. Maybe the two species haven't been coevolving at all, in
which case the very foundations of the Red Queen hypothesis would
crumble.
Levi Morran of Indiana University and his colleagues have given the
Red Queen theory a new boost. In the lab, the researchers pitted
roundworms against a species of bacteria that kills them, and observed what happened
as the two coevolved. Turns out, roundworms that produced asexually
were killed off in just 20 generations, while sexually reproducing worms
were able to continually evolve to fend off their bacterial attackers.
In a race to stay in the same place, it seems that sex is key.
Sex is hard to explain
12:11 PM
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