Simulated inversions may persist as polymorphisms when linked to sexually antagonistic, pleiotropic variants. In turn, the presence of inversions facilitates the accumulation of antagonistic variation. Rates of long-term persistence are shown for simulations with two defined antagonistic variants alone (left panels) and with the additional presence of a defined inversion (right panels). To focus the potential addition of a second linked variant to an antagonistic haplotype, we begin with the stronger variant already at an intermediate frequency in the population (0.5). The weaker antagonistic variant and the inversion either both start at 0.5 frequency as well (upper row) or both start at a lower frequency of 0.05 (lower row). The 1 Morgan chromosomal segment is diagrammed above the plots, with the inversion breakpoints marked (0.21M, 0.55M), chosen to include space across and beyond the inverted region. The proportion of simulations in which the second, variably-positioned weaker antagonistic variant (survival and reproductive values 0.86, 0.12) maintains polymorphism is shown (light red line), dependent on the recombination distance from a stronger allele (0.75,0.3) at fixed position 0.225M, which always persists (dark red line at 1 across the top of each plot). In the right panels, the proportion of replicates in which the inversion is retained is also plotted (blue line). Values for each parameter combination were averaged over 1000 replicate simulations, for populations of 1000 diploid individuals run for 20N generations. Gene conversion occurs for each heterozygous variant at a probability of 10−2 per female meiosis with random direction. Crossover arrangements generating aneuploidy, where there are an odd number of crossovers within the inverted region of a heterokaryotypic parent, are resampled from the same parent to represent removal to polar bodies or reproductive compensation.