Costs of breeding and their effects on the direction of sexual selection
- 15 November 2005
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 273 (1585) , 465-470
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2005.3309
Abstract
A recent life-history model has challenged the importance of the operational sex ratio and the potential reproductive rates of males and females as the factors most important for the control of sexual selection, arguing that the cost of breeding, interpreted as the probability of dying as a consequence of the current breeding attempt, is the single most important factor that best predicts a mating system. In one species of bushcricket, the mating system can be reversed by resource manipulation. Here, we examine the costs of breeding in this system. Consistent with the model, increased costs of breeding can explain female competition and increased male choosiness under resource limitation. However, this is due to differences in the time required for a breeding attempt, rather than differences in breeding mortality which did not differ between the sexes. In general, males lived longer than females and we discuss the possible reasons behind this pattern of sex-biased non-breeding mortality.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Unusually dynamic sex roles in a fishNature, 2004
- Nonlinear and correlational sexual selection on ‘honest’ female ornamentationProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2003
- Parasites as a Viability Cost of Sexual Selection in Natural Populations of MammalsScience, 2002
- Sex Roles Are Not Always Reversed When the Potential Reproductive Rate Is Higher in FemalesThe American Naturalist, 1999
- The dynamics of operational sex ratios and competition for matesTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 1996
- Sex Mortality Differentials in the Bean Beetle: Reframing the QuestionThe American Naturalist, 1994
- Reproductive energetics of the role reversing bushcricket, Kawanaphila nartee (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Zaprochilinae)Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 1994
- Potential Reproductive Rates and the Operation of Sexual SelectionThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1992
- Experimental reversal of courtship roles in an insectNature, 1990
- Intra-sexual selection in DrosophilaHeredity, 1948