Evolution Used Same Genetic Formula to Turn Animals Monogamous

January 7, 2019 • by Marc Airhart

In five cases where vertebrates evolved monogamy, the same changes in gene expression occurred each time.

Comparison of two frogs, one green, one red and black

In many non-monogamous species, females provide all or most of the offspring care. In monogamous species, parental care is often shared. In these frogs, parental care includes transporting tadpoles one by one after hatching to small pools of water. In the non-monogamous strawberry poison frog (Oophaga pumilio, left) moms perform this task; however, in the monogamous mimic poison frog (Ranitomeya imitator, right) this is dad's job. Credit: Yusan Yang and James Tumulty.


An evoluntionary tree showing how unrelated monogamous species share common genetic markers

At least five times during the past 450 million years, evolution used a kind of universal formula for turning animals monogamous — turning up the activity of some genes (red) and turning down others (blue) in the brain. Researchers studied five pairs of closely related species – four mammals, two birds, two frogs and two fish — each with one monogamous and one non-monogamous member. They found 24 genes with similar expression patterns in monogamous males. Illustration credit: University of Texas at Austin.

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Three birds are shown. On the left is a blue jay, which is primarily blue with some patches of white on wing tips, around the face and on the chest. On the right is a green jay, which is primarily green with a lighter colored chest and a mix of blue and black patches on the face. In the center is a hybrid bird, which is primarily blue and resembles a blue jay, but with a larger area of black on the face, more akin to a green jay.

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