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      Mendel’s law reveals fatal flaws in Bateman’s 1948 study of mating and fitness

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          Abstract

          Bateman’s experimental study of Drosophila melanogaster produced conclusions that are now part of the bedrock premises of modern sexual selection. Today it is the most cited experimental study in sexual selection, and famous as the first experimental demonstration of sex differences in the relationship between number of mates and relative reproductive success. We repeated the experimental methodology of the original to evaluate its reliability. The results indicate that Bateman’s methodology of visible mutations to assign parentage and reproductive success to subject adults is significantly biased. When combined in offspring, the mutations decrease offspring survival, so that counts of mate number and reproductive success are mismeasured. Bateman’s method overestimates the number of subjects with no mates and underestimates the number with one or more mates for both sexes. Here we discuss why Bateman’s paper is important and present additional analyses of data from our monogamy trials. Monogamy trials can inform inferences about the force of sexual selection in populations because in monogamy trials male–male competition and female choice are absent. Monogamy trials also would have provided Bateman with an a priori test of the fit of his data to Mendel’s laws, an unstated, but vital assumption of his methodology for assigning parentage from which he inferred the number of mates per individual subject and their reproductive success. Even under enforced monogamous mating, offspring frequencies of double mutant, single mutant and no mutant offspring were significantly different from Mendelian expectations proving that Bateman’s method was inappropriate for answering the questions he posed. Double mutant offspring (those with a mutation from each parent) suffered significant inviability as did single mutant offspring whenever they inherited their mother’s marker but the wild-type allele at their father’s marker locus. These inviability effects produced two important inaccuracies in Bateman’s results and conclusions. (1) Some matings that actually occurred were invisible and (2) reproductive success of some mothers was under-estimated. Both observations show that Bateman’s conclusions about sex differences in number of mates and reproductive success were unwarranted, based on biased observations. We speculate about why Bateman’s classic study remained without replication for so long, and we discuss why repetition almost 60 years after the original is still timely, necessary and critical to the scientific enterprise. We highlight overlooked alternative hypotheses to urge that modern tests of Bateman’s conclusions go beyond confirmatory studies to test alternative hypotheses to explain the relationship between mate number and reproductive success.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Fly (Austin)
          Fly (Austin)
          FLY
          Fly
          Landes Bioscience
          1933-6934
          1933-6942
          01 January 2013
          01 January 2013
          01 January 2013
          : 7
          : 1
          : 28-38
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology; University of California, Los Angeles; Los Angeles, CA USA
          [2 ]Institute of the Environment and Sustainability; University of California, Los Angeles; Los Angeles, CA USA
          [3 ]Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute; Washington, DC USA
          [4 ]Department of Genetics; University of Georgia; Athens, GA USA
          [5 ]Department of Biology; Emory University; Atlanta, GA USA
          Author notes
          [* ] Correspondence to: Patricia Adair Gowaty, Yong-Kyu Kim and Wyatt W. Anderson; Email: gowaty@ 123456eeb.ucla.edu , wyatt@ 123456uga.edu and yongkyu@ 123456uga.edu
          Article
          2012FLY0041R 23505
          10.4161/fly.23505
          3660748
          23360967
          086cc7b1-1926-4e32-b5d2-9339ee5f0811
          Copyright © 2013 Landes Bioscience

          This is an open-access article licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. The article may be redistributed, reproduced, and reused for non-commercial purposes, provided the original source is properly cited.

          History
          : 16 October 2012
          : 09 December 2012
          : 04 January 2013
          Categories
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          Molecular biology
          drosophila melanogaster,a.j. bateman,mendel’s rules,fitness variances,genetic parentage tests,number of mates,number of offspring,reproductive success

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