Sex and destiny: The role of mating signals in speciation and macroevolution
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Historical Biology
- Vol. 13 (2-3) , 173-197
- https://doi.org/10.1080/08912969909386580
Abstract
A growing body of research posits a central role for mating signals in speciation and the reproductive isolation of species, yet there has been relatively little consideration of mating signal evolution within macroevolutionary theory. Factors that influence the divergence of fertilization systems generally, and mating signals specifically, may incidentally influence rates of speciation and patterns of species sorting. Potential key processes include: genetic drift, natural selection (differential survival), selection for mate recognition, and sexual selection. This paper explores the integration of mating signal evolution into macroevolution and hierarchy theory, arguing that speciational patterns may frequently result from “effect sorting”; in which microevolutionary processes operating at the organismal level have macroevolutionary effects at the clade level. Preliminary evidence indicates that sexual selection is a widespread and potent evolutionary force that, together with other mechanisms, may have a large, though incidental impact on species sorting. The Mate Competition Hypothesis is here proposed to account for this possibility, postulating that heritable, clade‐specific variations in the intensity of sexual selection and the potential breadth of signal‐receiver systems contribute to divergent patterns of species‐richness. Several examples from the vertebrate fossil record are consistent with this hypothesis.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- Craniofacial ontogeny in centrosaurine dinosaurs (Ornithischia: Ceratopsidae): taxonomic and behavioral implicationsZoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1997
- Two new horned dinosaurs from the upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana; with a phylogenetic analysis of the Centrosaurinae (Ornithischia: Ceratopsidae)Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 1995
- Taxic evolutionary paleoecology and the ecological context of macroevolutionary changeEvolutionary Ecology, 1994
- Species and speciation: Evolutionary tempo and mode in the fossil record reconsideredGeobios, 1991
- The Analysis of Evolutionary SuccessSystematic Zoology, 1988
- Ecology in relation to speciation rates: some case histories of Miocene-Recent mammal cladesEvolutionary Ecology, 1987
- Behavioural ecology: Sex among the dunnocksNature, 1985
- Evolution: Palaeontology at the high tableNature, 1984
- Sexual Selection, Social Competition, and SpeciationThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1983
- On the Relationship of Social Evolution and Ecology in UngulatesAmerican Zoologist, 1974