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Equilibrium and Extinction in a Trisexual Diploid Mating System: An InvestigationErik C. Buehler1, Sanjoy Das1, and Jack F. Cully, Jr.2 1Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506
2Kansas Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Division of Biology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66504
Abstract. In order to study the dynamics of a three-sex (trisexual) mating system, we have chosen to extend the heterogametic sex-determining mechanism, used in many species, to include three sexes: XX, XY and YY. In this model, non-like types may mate, but like-types may not mate. Yeasts and fungi are known to have multiple mating types (sometimes numbering in the thousands), but the mechanics of these sex-determining systems are markedly different from the heterogametic system we are interested in studying [5]. Our motivation for using this scheme stems from the knowledge that in some species, such as most fish, XX is female, and XY is male [1]. Under certain conditions, a YY individual may be produced, and in the case of fish, this usually develops into a male. Our goal is to discover the emergent behavior of a hypothetical “diploid trisexual mating system” (DTMS) where the YY type is its own distinct “mating type”, in order to shed light on why such a system is not observed in nature today. LNCS 3102, p. 495 f. lncs@springer.de
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