| Literature DB >> 28634289 |
Luke J Eberhart-Phillips1, Clemens Küpper2,3, Tom E X Miller4, Medardo Cruz-López5, Kathryn H Maher6, Natalie Dos Remedios7, Martin A Stoffel8,9, Joseph I Hoffman8, Oliver Krüger8, Tamás Székely6,10.
Abstract
Adult sex ratio (ASR) is a central concept in population biology and a key factor in sexual selection, but why do most demographic models ignore sex biases? Vital rates often vary between the sexes and across life history, but their relative contributions to ASR variation remain poorly understood-an essential step to evaluate sex ratio theories in the wild and inform conservation. Here, we combine structured two-sex population models with individual-based mark-recapture data from an intensively monitored polygamous population of snowy plovers. We show that a strongly male-biased ASR (0.63) is primarily driven by sex-specific survival of juveniles rather than adults or dependent offspring. This finding provides empirical support for theories of unbiased sex allocation when sex differences in survival arise after the period of parental investment. Importantly, a conventional model ignoring sex biases significantly overestimated population viability. We suggest that sex-specific population models are essential to understand the population dynamics of sexual organisms: reproduction and population growth are most sensitive to perturbations in survival of the limiting sex. Overall, our study suggests that sex-biased early survival may contribute toward mating system evolution and population persistence, with implications for both sexual selection theory and biodiversity conservation.Keywords: ASR; Charadrius nivosus; mark–recapture; sex allocation; two-sex matrix model
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28634289 PMCID: PMC5502594 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1620043114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205