Evolution's Rainbow. Joan Roughgarden
those who do mate. Examples include grasshoppers, locusts, moths, mosquitoes, roaches, fruit flies, and bees among insects, as well as turkeys and chickens.8 Fruit flies grow easily in the laboratory and are especially well studied. Over 80 percent of fruit fly species have at least some females that reproduce entirely asexually. Although the majority of females in these species reproduce through mating, selection in the laboratory increased sixtyfold the proportion of females not needing to mate, yielding a vigorous all-female strain.9
Thus all-female species are well known among animals. So why don’t even more all-female species exist? Indeed, why aren’t all species all-female? To answer this question, let’s look at the costs and benefits of reproducing with and without sex.
Sexual reproduction cuts the population’s growth rate in half—this is the cost of sex. Only females produce offspring, not males. If half the population is male, then the speed of population growth is half that of an all-female population. An all-female species can quickly outproduce a male/female species, allowing an all-female species to survive in high-mortality habitats where a male/female species can’t succeed. (This result is also true in hermaphrodite species, in which the fifty-fifty allocation of reproductive effort to male and female function reduces the female allocation used to make eggs by half.)
The potential for doubling production in an all-female species hasn’t escaped the attention of agricultural scientists. In the 1960s, turkeys and chickens were bred to make all-female strains.10 Indeed, the cloning of a sheep in Scotland reflected a fifty-year-old aspiration to increase agricultural production by taking the sex out of reproduction. However, despite the big advantage in population growth rate that all-female species enjoy and the many examples of all-female species that do occur, clonally reproducing species remain a tiny minority. Far and away most species are sexual. Nature has experimented many times and keeps experimenting with clonal species, but with little success. Sex does work. Why?
The benefit of sex is survival over evolutionary time. Lacking sex, clonal species are evolutionary dead ends. On an evolutionary time scale, almost all clonal species are recently derived from sexual ancestors. On the family tree of species, asexual species are only short twigs, not the long branches.11 The advantages of sex are also demonstrated by species who can use sex or not, depending on the time of year. Aphids (tiny insects that live on garden plants) reproduce clonally at the beginning of the growing season, switching to sexual reproduction at the end of the season. Aphids benefit from fast reproduction when colonizing an empty rose bush, but the anticipated change of conditions at the end of the season makes sexual reproduction more attractive.12
Clonally reproducing species are “weeds”—species specialized for quick growth and fast dispersal, like plants that locate and colonize new patches of ground. The common dandelion of North America is a clonal reproducer whose sexual ancestors live in Europe.13 Weeds eventually give up their territory to species who are poorer colonizers but more effective over the long term.14 The geckoes who colonized the South Pacific and the whiptail lizards of New Mexico streambeds make sense in these contexts, where dispersal is at a premium or the habitat is continually disturbed.
Clonal reproduction is a specialized mode of life, not recommended for any species that fancies itself a permanent resident of this planet. But we haven’t answered why sexual reproduction is good over the long term. Two theories have been offered for why sex benefits a species, one diversity-affirming, the other diversity-repressing. Both theories agree that asexual species are short-lived in evolutionary time relative to sexual species and that sex guarantees the longer species survival. Both theories therefore agree that sex is beneficial to a species. Both theories also agree that the purpose of sex isn’t reproduction as such, because asexual species are perfectly capable of reproducing. But the theories have different perceptions of why sex is good. The diversity-affirming theory views diversity itself as good and sex as maintaining that diversity. The diversity-repressing theory views diversity as bad and sex as keeping the diversity pruned back.15 Let’s start with the diversity-affirming theory.
THE DIVERSITY-AFFIRMING THEORY
According to the diversity-affirming theory for the benefit of sex, sex continually rebalances the genetic portfolio of a species. Think of a savings account and jewelry—a rainbow with two colors. How much can both colors earn together? When demand for jewelry is low, one can’t sell jewelry, even to a pawnshop, and earning 2 percent from a bank account looks great. When jewelry is hot, interest on a bank account looks cheap and selling jewelry turns a good profit. The overall earnings are the total from both investments.
A species earns offspring instead of money from its investments. The long-term survival of a species depends on being sufficiently diversified to always have some offspring-earning colors. Although biologists may talk about the rainbow as a source of genes for new environments, it is in fact more important for surviving the regular fluctuations between hot and cold, wet and dry, and the arrival and departure of new predators, competitors, and pathogens like the bubonic plague or AIDS.16
The social environment within a species is always changing too. Concepts of the “ideal” mate change through time. Among humans, men have sometimes preferred the amply proportioned Mama Casses among us, at other times the skinny Twiggys, as recorded in the portraits of women from art museums. Other aspects of our social environment have also changed over the centuries, like the fraction of time spent with others of the same sex or the opposite sex, or the number of sex partners a person has. Changes in the social setting within a species, as well as changes in the ecological and physical environment, all affect which colors of the rainbow shine the brightest at any one time.
A clonal species can accumulate diversity through mutation, or it may have multiple origins, thereby starting out with a limited rainbow. In fact, several genetically distinct clones have been detected among the South Pacific geckoes and dandelions. Still, these mutation-based and origin-based rainbows are nearly monochromatic.17
Furthermore, even the limited rainbow of a clonal species is continually endangered. The colors that shine brightly are always crowding out the colors that don’t, causing diversity to contract over time. Recall the jewelry and the savings account. If diamonds are valuable for a long time, their value grows and comes to overshadow the savings account. If profits are automatically reinvested in the most immediately successful venture, the portfolio gradually loses its diversity. Then when the demand for jewelry drops—say because a new find of diamonds floods the market—the portfolio takes a big hit. This progression is similar to that of the clonal reproducer, which courts danger by concentrating on only a few investments. Instead, one should redistribute some earnings each year across the investments. If jewelry has a good year, sell some and put the proceeds in the savings account. If interest is high one year, then withdraw some funds and buy jewelry. Shuffling money across investments in this way maintains the portfolio’s diversity, and a bad year for one investment doesn’t cause disastrous losses in the portfolio. Wall Street investors call this shuffling “rebalancing a portfolio.” This is the strategy of the sexual reproducer. Every generation when sexually reproducing animals mate, they mix genes with one another and resynthesize the colors in short supply. Thus, according to the diversity-affirming theory, sex serves to maintain the biological rainbow, which conserves the species.18
THE DIVERSITY-REPRESSING THEORY
According to the diversity-repressing theory for the benefit of sex, sex protects the genetic quality of the species. The diversity-repressing theory envisions that asexual species accumulate harmful mutations over time and gradually become less functional, as though asexual lizards gradually lost the ability to run fast or digest some food. Sex supposedly counteracts this danger by allowing family lines that have picked up harmful mutations to recombine, producing offspring free of bad mutations. According to this theory, some offspring will possess both families’ mutations and will die even more quickly, but other offspring will have none of the mutations, and will prosper on behalf of the species. According to this theory, without sex each and every family line inexorably accumulates mutations, leading eventually to species extinction.
ENDING THE DEBATE
Although