Cj. Nagelkerke et Icw. Hardy, THE INFLUENCE OF DEVELOPMENTAL MORTALITY ON OPTIMAL SEX ALLOCATION UNDER LOCAL MATE COMPETITION, Behavioral ecology, 5(4), 1994, pp. 401-411
In panmictic populations, optimal sex allocation is, under the assumpt
ions of Fisher's model, not influenced by the probability of offspring
developmental mortality, or by differences in mortality between the s
exes. In contrast, when mating opportunities are confined to siblings,
developmental mortality can influence optimal sex allocation. Many an
imal species have both local mating and developmental mortality. We sh
ow that when developmental mortality is random for individual offsprin
g, optimal sex allocation is influenced by mortality among males but n
ot among females. Male mortality increases the allocation to males, bu
t this should never be male biased, even under extreme male mortality.
This result applies both when mothers are able to control the sex of
individual offspring precisely, and when sex is allocated with binomia
l probability. The influence of mortality becomes progressively larger
when the variance of the distribution of mortality over clutches dimi
nishes. The reduction in fitness is greater than the proportion of mor
tality, especially at small clutch sizes, and mortality reduces the ad
vantage of producing precise sex ratios, and of local mate competition
in general.