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Page 1: Evolution III - contents

Evolution III - contents

• Sexual selection vs. natural selection

• Male and female strategies

• Alternative mating tactics

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Sexual dimorphism

• The large, male California sea lion, is distinctive from the surrounding, smaller females (from Kardong).

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Sexual dimorphism• e.g. in peacock

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Sexual selection

• Differential reproduction owing to variation in the ability to obtain mates (as opposed to natural selection, which is related to the differential survival of individuals in nature, depending on non-sex related traits) – see Futuyma – Evolutionary Biology

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Males are often less selective than females

Australianjewel beetle

maletoad

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Biologists exploiting animal desire

• sea

elephant

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Anisogamy - Sperm and oocyte of hamsters (enlarged 4000 times – from

Alcock)

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Differential reproductive success in males and females

• Female oocytes are a limited reproductive resource, whereas male sperm is not

• Therefore, males have the potential to sire many more offspring than females

• In humans, the male world record is held by Moulay Ismail the Bloodthirsty (Sultan of Morocco 1672-1727), who is said to have fathered 888 children

• Men produce between

100 and 300 million

sperm per day.

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Female reproductive success in humans

• According to Guinness World Records 2001, the highest officially recorded number of children born to one mother is 69. This was the first wife of Feodor Vassilyev (1707-1782) of Shuya, Russia. Between 1725 and 1765, in a total of 27 confinements, she gave birth to 16 pairs of twins, seven sets of triplets, and four sets of quadruplets. 67 of them survived infancy.

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Females must be more choosy because

• costs of producing female gametes are higher

• costs of pregnancy are higher (e.g. in mammals)

• females often invest more into parental care

• costs of mating with partner of poor genetic quality are higher in females

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Thus, a general pattern across the animal kingdom is

• males compete for females and try to mate with as many as possible (emphasis often on quantity)

• females are choosy and try to find the highest quality partners (emphasis on quality)

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How to impress females

• 1. look nice

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How to impress females

• 2. bring them presents

(as e.g. in scorpion flies (right)

and Bittacus (below))

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How to impress females

• 3. offer yourself as a present (e.g. preying mantids, some spiders: females cannibalise

males during or after mating –

thus detracting attention

from other possible sex

partners. also you give your

body as a resource for offspring)

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How to impress females• 4. sing them songs (picture from Alcock)

Number of songs in repertoire

Days to finding partner

European warblers

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If none of this works - cheat

• Satellite strategies – younger or “weaker” males often position themselves strategically near an attractive male, then sneaking up on females when the large male is un-attentive or otherwise engaged

Great Plains toads,longhorn sheep, horseshoe crabs

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Alternative male mating tactics

• different males in the same species use different strategies to gain access to females

• satellite strategies are one example

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Alternative male mating tactics – “rape”

• In scorpion flies, some

males will not bring

presents, but mate with

unwilling females.

Usually “losers”,

fertilisation success

typically low.

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FIGURE 7.12 Barn Swallows (Kardong, after Andersson, Moller)

Females often prefer exaggerated male traits

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Why do females prefer exaggerated male traits?

• “Good genes hypothesis” – extravagant traits indicate biological fitness (because less fit males would be less able to afford such traits).

• One special case of this hypotheses is that such traits indicate ability to cope with parasites.

• “Runaway selection hypotheses” – females prefer sexually attractive traits which they pass on to sons, which makes sons more fit (but only because the sons in turn will also be more attractive to females).