| Literature DB >> 26749372 |
P E Hopwood1, A J Moore1,2, T Tregenza1, N J Royle1.
Abstract
Male parents face a choice: should they invest more in caring for offspring or in attempting to mate with other females? The most profitable course depends on the intensity of competition for mates, which is likely to vary with the population sex ratio. However, the balance of pay-offs may vary among individual males depending on their competitive prowess or attractiveness. We tested the prediction that sex ratio and size of the resource holding male provide cues regarding the level of mating competition prior to breeding and therefore influence the duration of a male's biparental caring in association with a female. Male burying beetles, Nicrophorus vespilloides were reared, post-eclosion, in groups that differed in sex ratio. Experimental males were subsequently translocated to the wild, provided with a breeding resource (carcass) and filmed. We found no evidence that sex ratio cues prior to breeding affected future parental care behaviour but males that experienced male-biased sex ratios took longer to attract wild mating partners. Smaller males attracted a higher proportion of females than did larger males, securing significantly more monogamous breeding associations as a result. Smaller males thus avoided competitive male-male encounters more often than larger males. This has potential benefits for their female partners who avoid both intrasexual competition and direct costs of higher mating frequency associated with competing males.Entities:
Keywords: body size; competitive investment; parental investment; sex ratio; sexual selection
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26749372 PMCID: PMC4785605 DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12803
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Evol Biol ISSN: 1010-061X Impact factor: 2.411
Figure 1(a) Box plot (to illustrate actual distribution using medians and IQRs; see Weissgerber et al., 2015) showing the relationship between calling experimental male size (y‐axis) and whether males first attracted a female or a male (x‐axis); (b) ‘survival’ curve to illustrate the difference in time elapsed (y‐axis), between experimental male commencing calling and first beetle arrival, among treatment groups (‘m’= solid line; ‘mmff’= dotted line; ‘mfff’= dashed line; ‘mmmf’= dot‐dash line).
Figure 2Box plots (to illustrate actual distribution using medians and IQRs) showing the relationship between experimental male size (y‐axes) and the competitive environment they encountered after calling for a mate (x‐axes): (a) size distribution of males encountering extra‐pair competition (male and/or female) vs. encountering a single female only; (b) ‘lone male’: experimental male was the only male (regardless of female number), ‘male–male’: experimental male meets at least one male rival; (c) ‘lone female’: females encounter no female rivals, ‘female–female’: female meets at least one female rival.
Figure 3Mean size of beetles arriving at initially unoccupied carcasses placed in the field. Numbers under x‐axis groups indicate the number of beetles successfully retrieved for analysis and the total number of beetles recorded in each category: ‘male to no male’: male arriving at carcass without a calling male; ‘male to male’ male arriving at carcass with a previously arrived calling male; ‘female to no male’: female arriving at carcass without a calling male; ‘female to male’ female arriving at carcass with a previously arrived calling male. Lower case letters over means and standard errors indicate Tukey's honest significant differences at P < 0.05.