Fisherian runaway or runaway selection is a sexual selection mechanism proposed by the mathematical biologist Ronald Fisher in the early 20th century, to account for the evolution of exaggerated male ornamentation by persistent, directional female choice. An example is the colourful and elaborate peacock plumage
compared to the relatively subdued peahen plumage; the costly
ornaments, notably the bird's extremely long tail, appear to be
incompatible with natural selection. Fisherian runaway can be postulated to include sexually dimorphic phenotypic traits such as behaviour expressed by either sex.
Extreme and apparently maladaptive sexual dimorphism represented a paradox for evolutionary biologists from Charles Darwin's time up to the modern synthesis.
Darwin attempted to resolve the paradox by assuming genetic bases for
both the preference and the ornament, and supposed an "aesthetic sense"
in higher animals, leading to powerful selection of both characteristics
in subsequent generations.
Fisher developed the theory further by assuming genetic correlation
between the preference and the ornament, that initially the ornament
signalled greater potential fitness
(the likelihood of leaving more descendants), so preference for the
ornament had a selective advantage. Subsequently, if strong enough,
female preference for exaggerated ornamentation in mate selection could
be enough to undermine natural selection even when the ornament has
become non-adaptive. Over subsequent generations this could lead to runaway selection by positive feedback, and the speed with which the trait and the preference increase could (until counter-selection interferes) increase exponentially ("geometrically").
Fisherian runaway has been difficult to demonstrate empirically,
because it has been difficult to detect both an underlying genetic
mechanism and a process by which it is initiated.
History
Charles Darwin published a book on sexual selection in 1871 called The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex,
which garnered interest upon its release but by the 1880s the ideas had
been deemed too controversial and were largely neglected. Alfred Russel Wallace disagreed with Darwin, particularly after Darwin's death, that sexual selection was a real phenomenon. R.A. Fisher was one of the few other biologists to engage with the question. When Wallace stated that animals show no sexual preference in his 1915 paper, The evolution of sexual preference, Fisher publicly disagreed:
The objection raised by Wallace ... that animals do not show any preference for their mates on account of their beauty, and in particular that female birds do not choose the males with the finest plumage, always seemed to the writer a weak one; partly from our necessary ignorance of the motives from which wild animals choose between a number of suitors; partly because there remains no satisfactory explanation either of the remarkable secondary sexual characters themselves, or of their careful display in love-dances, or of the evident interest aroused by these antics in the female; and partly also because this objection is apparently associated with the doctrine put forward by Sir Alfred Wallace in the same book, that the artistic faculties in man belong to his "spiritual nature," and therefore have come to him independently of his "animal nature" produced by natural selection.
Fisher, in the foundational 1930 book, The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection,
first outlined a model by which runaway inter-sexual selection could
lead to sexually dimorphic male ornamentation based upon female choice
and a preference for "attractive" but otherwise non-adaptive traits in
male mates. He suggested that selection for traits that increase fitness
may be quite common:
[O]ccasions may not be infrequent when a sexual preference of a particular kind may confer a selective advantage, and therefore become established in the species. Whenever appreciable differences exist in a species, which are in fact correlated with selective advantage, there will be a tendency to select also those individuals of the opposite sex which most clearly discriminate the difference to be observed, and which most decidedly prefer the more advantageous type. Sexual preference originated in this way may or may not confer any direct advantage upon the individuals selected, and so hasten the effect of the Natural Selection in progress. It may therefore be far more widespread than the occurrence of striking secondary sexual characters.
Fisher, R.A. (1930) The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection. ISBN 0-19-850440-3
A strong female choice for the expression alone, as opposed to the
function, of a male ornament can oppose and undermine the forces of
natural selection and result in the runaway sexual selection that leads
to the further exaggeration of the ornament (as well as the preference)
until the costs (incurred by natural selection) of the expression become
greater than the benefit (bestowed by sexual selection).
Peacocks and sexual dimorphism
The plumage dimorphism of the peacock and peahen of the species within the genus Pavo is a prime example of the ornamentation paradox that has long puzzled evolutionary biologists; Darwin wrote in 1860:
The sight of a feather in a peacock’s tail, whenever I gaze at it, makes me sick!
The
peacock's colorful and elaborate tail requires a great deal of energy
to grow and maintain. It also reduces the bird's agility, and may
increase the animal's visibility to predators. The tail appears to lower
the overall fitness of the individuals who possess it. Yet, it has
evolved, indicating that peacocks with longer and more colorfully
elaborate tails have some advantage over peacocks who don’t. Fisherian
runaway posits that the evolution of the peacock tail is made possible
if peahens have a preference to mate with peacocks that possess a longer
and more colourful tail. Peahens that select males with these tails in
turn have male offspring that are more likely to have long and colourful
tails and thus are more likely to be sexually successful themselves.
Equally importantly, the female offspring of these peahens are more
likely to have a preference for peacocks with longer and more colourful
tails. However, though the relative fitness of males with large tails is
higher than those without, the absolute fitness levels of all the
members of the population (both male and female) is less than it would
be if none of the peahens (or only a small number) had a preference for a
longer or more colorful tail.
Initiation
Fisher
outlined two fundamental conditions that must be fulfilled in order for
the Fisherian runaway mechanism to lead to the evolution of extreme
ornamentation:
- Sexual preference in at least one of the sexes
- A corresponding reproductive advantage to the preference.
Fisher argued in his 1915 paper, "The evolution of sexual preference"
that the type of female preference necessary for Fisherian runaway
could be initiated without any understanding or appreciation for beauty.
Fisher suggested that any visible features that indicate fitness, that
are not themselves adaptive, that draw attention, and that vary in their
appearance amongst the population
of males so that the females can easily compare them, would be enough
to initiate Fisherian runaway. This suggestion is compatible with his
theory, and indicates that the choice of feature is essentially
arbitrary, and could be different in different populations. Such
arbitrariness is borne out by mathematical modelling, and by observation
of isolated populations of sandgrouse, where the males can differ markedly from those in other populations.
Genetic basis
Fisherian runaway assumes that sexual preference in females and ornamentation in males are both genetically variable (heritable).
If instead of regarding the existence of sexual preference as a basic fact to be established only by direct observation, we consider that the tastes of organisms … be regarded as the products of evolutionary change, governed by the relative advantage which such tastes may confer. Whenever appreciable differences exist in a species … there will be a tendency to select also those individuals of the opposite sex which most clearly discriminate the difference to be observed, and which most decidedly prefer the more advantageous type.
Fisher, R.A. (1930) The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection. ISBN 0-19-850440-3
Female choice
Fisher
argued that the selection for exaggerated male ornamentation is driven
by the coupled exaggeration of female sexual preference for the
ornament.
Certain remarkable consequences do, however, follow ... in a species in which the preferences of … the female, have a great influence on the number of offspring left by individual males. ... development will proceed, so long as the disadvantage is more than counterbalanced by the advantage in sexual selection … there will also be a net advantage in favour of giving to it a more decided preference.
Fisher, R.A. (1930) The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection. ISBN 0-19-850440-3
Positive feedback
Over
time a positive feedback mechanism will see more exaggerated sons and
choosier daughters being produced with each successive generation;
resulting in the runaway selection for the further exaggeration of both
the ornament and the preference (until the costs for producing the
ornament outweigh the reproductive benefit of possessing it).
The two characteristics affected by such a process, namely [ornamental] development in the male, and sexual preference for such development in the female, must thus advance together, and … will advance with ever increasing speed. [I]t is easy to see that the speed of development will be proportional to the development already attained, which will therefore increase with time exponentially, or in a geometric progression.
Fisher, R.A. (1930) The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection. ISBN 0-19-850440-3
Such a process must soon run against some check. Two such are obvious. If carried far enough … counterselection in favour of less ornamented males will be encountered to balance the advantage of sexual preference; … elaboration and … female preference will be brought to a standstill, and a condition of relative stability will be attained. It will be more effective still if the disadvantage to the males of their sexual ornaments so diminishes their numbers surviving, relative to the females, as to cut at the root of the process, by demising the reproductive advantage to be conferred by female preference.
Fisher, R.A. (1930) The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection. ISBN 0-19-850440-3
Alternative hypotheses
Several alternative hypotheses use the same genetic runaway (or
positive feedback) mechanism but differ in the mechanisms of the
initiation. The sexy son hypothesis
(also proposed by Fisher) suggests that females that choose desirably
ornamented males will have desirably ornamented (or sexy) sons, and that
the effect of that behaviour on spreading the female's genes through
subsequent generations may outweigh other factors such as the level of
parental investment by the father.
Indicator hypotheses suggest that females choose desirably
ornamented males because the cost of producing the desirable ornaments
is indicative of good genes by way of the individual's vigour.
Other hypotheses for the evolution of male ornamentation include the sensory bias hypothesis, the compatibility hypothesis and the handicap principle.