Evolutionary pets: offspring numbers reveal speciation process in domesticated chickens.

Since Darwin, the nature of the relationship between evolution and domestication has been debated. Evolution offers different mechanisms of selection that lead to adaptation and may end in the origin of new species as defined by the biological species concept. Domestication has given rise to numerou...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Inga Tiemann, Gerd Rehkämper
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3412861?pdf=render
id doaj-eb1181bc01dc48d9aa3170fe3c67f90e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-eb1181bc01dc48d9aa3170fe3c67f90e2020-11-24T22:04:58ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0178e4145310.1371/journal.pone.0041453Evolutionary pets: offspring numbers reveal speciation process in domesticated chickens.Inga TiemannGerd RehkämperSince Darwin, the nature of the relationship between evolution and domestication has been debated. Evolution offers different mechanisms of selection that lead to adaptation and may end in the origin of new species as defined by the biological species concept. Domestication has given rise to numerous breeds in almost every domesticated species, including chickens. At the same time, so-called artificial selection seems to exclude mechanisms of sexual selection by the animals themselves. We want to forward the question to the animal itself: With whom do you reproduce successfully? This study focused on the sexual behavior of the domestic chicken Gallus gallus f.dom., particularly the White Crested Polish breed. Experiments on mate choice and the observation of fertilization and hatching rates of mixed-breeding groups revealed breed-specific preferences. In breeding groups containing White Crested Polish and a comparative breed, more purebred chicks hatched than hybrids (number of eggs collected: 1059). Mating was possible in equal shares, but in relation to the number of eggs collected, purebred offspring (62.75% ± 7.10%, M ± SE) hatched to a greater extend compared to hybrid offspring (28.75% ± 15.32%, M ± SE). These data demonstrate that the mechanism of sexual selection is still present in domestic chicken breeds, which includes the alteration of gene frequencies typical for domestication and evolutionary speciation. Due to selection and mate choice we state that breeding in principle can generate new species. Therefore, we see domestication as an evolutionary process that integrates human interests of animal breeding with innate mate choice by the animal.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3412861?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Inga Tiemann
Gerd Rehkämper
spellingShingle Inga Tiemann
Gerd Rehkämper
Evolutionary pets: offspring numbers reveal speciation process in domesticated chickens.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Inga Tiemann
Gerd Rehkämper
author_sort Inga Tiemann
title Evolutionary pets: offspring numbers reveal speciation process in domesticated chickens.
title_short Evolutionary pets: offspring numbers reveal speciation process in domesticated chickens.
title_full Evolutionary pets: offspring numbers reveal speciation process in domesticated chickens.
title_fullStr Evolutionary pets: offspring numbers reveal speciation process in domesticated chickens.
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary pets: offspring numbers reveal speciation process in domesticated chickens.
title_sort evolutionary pets: offspring numbers reveal speciation process in domesticated chickens.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Since Darwin, the nature of the relationship between evolution and domestication has been debated. Evolution offers different mechanisms of selection that lead to adaptation and may end in the origin of new species as defined by the biological species concept. Domestication has given rise to numerous breeds in almost every domesticated species, including chickens. At the same time, so-called artificial selection seems to exclude mechanisms of sexual selection by the animals themselves. We want to forward the question to the animal itself: With whom do you reproduce successfully? This study focused on the sexual behavior of the domestic chicken Gallus gallus f.dom., particularly the White Crested Polish breed. Experiments on mate choice and the observation of fertilization and hatching rates of mixed-breeding groups revealed breed-specific preferences. In breeding groups containing White Crested Polish and a comparative breed, more purebred chicks hatched than hybrids (number of eggs collected: 1059). Mating was possible in equal shares, but in relation to the number of eggs collected, purebred offspring (62.75% ± 7.10%, M ± SE) hatched to a greater extend compared to hybrid offspring (28.75% ± 15.32%, M ± SE). These data demonstrate that the mechanism of sexual selection is still present in domestic chicken breeds, which includes the alteration of gene frequencies typical for domestication and evolutionary speciation. Due to selection and mate choice we state that breeding in principle can generate new species. Therefore, we see domestication as an evolutionary process that integrates human interests of animal breeding with innate mate choice by the animal.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3412861?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT ingatiemann evolutionarypetsoffspringnumbersrevealspeciationprocessindomesticatedchickens
AT gerdrehkamper evolutionarypetsoffspringnumbersrevealspeciationprocessindomesticatedchickens
_version_ 1725828001164165120