Published on 11 August 2017 |
Data from: Selection on an extreme weapon in the frog legged leaf beetle (Sagra femorata)
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Biologists have been fascinated with the extreme products of sexual selection for decades. However, relatively few studies have characterized patterns of selection acting on ornaments and weapons in the wild. Here, we measure selection on a wild population of weapon-bearing beetles (frog legged leaf beetles: Sagra femorata) for two consecutive breeding seasons. We consider variation in both weapon size (hindleg length), and in relative weapon size (deviations from the population average scaling relationship between hindleg length and body size), and provide evidence for directional selection on weapon size per se and stabilizing selection on a particular scaling relationship in this population. We suggest that whenever growth in body size is sensitive to external circumstance such as nutrition, then considering deviations from population-level scaling relationships will better reflect patterns of selection relevant to evolution of the ornament or weapon than will variation in trait size per se. This is because trait-size versus body-size scaling relationships approximate underlying developmental reaction norms relating trait growth with body condition in these species. Heightened condition-sensitive expression is a hallmark of the exaggerated ornaments and weapons favored by sexual selection, yet this plasticity is rarely reflected in the way we think about – and measure – selection acting on these structures in the wild.
Citations (1)
- https://doi.org/10.1111/evo.13336DataCite MDC
Cited on 09 October 2017
Weight: 1.00
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Publication Details
Subfield
Genetics
Field
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Domain
Life Sciences
Confidence Score
37%
Source
Scholar Data Model