Literature DB >> 33950569

Positive allometry of sexually selected traits: Do metabolic maintenance costs play an important role?

Ummat Somjee1.   

Abstract

Sexual selection drives the evolution of some of the most exaggerated traits in nature. Studies on sexual selection often focus on the size of these traits relative to body size, but few focus on energetic maintenance costs of the tissues that compose them, and the ways in which these costs vary with body size. The relationships between energy use and body size have consequences that may allow large individuals to invest disproportionally more in sexually selected structures, or lead to the reduced per-gram maintenance cost of enlarged structures. Although sexually selected traits can incur energetic maintenance costs, these costs are not universally high; they are dependent on the relative mass and metabolic activity of tissues associated with them. Energetic costs of maintenance may play a pervasive yet little-explored role in shaping the relative scaling of sexually selected traits across diverse taxa. Also see the video abstract here: https://youtu.be/JyuoQIeA33Q.
© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Keywords:  energetic constraints; metabolic allometry; pace of life; positive allometry; sexual selection; sexually selected ornaments; sexually selected weapons

Year:  2021        PMID: 33950569     DOI: 10.1002/bies.202000183

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bioessays        ISSN: 0265-9247            Impact factor:   4.345


  3 in total

1.  Large and exaggerated sexually selected weapons comprise high proportions of metabolically inexpensive exoskeleton.

Authors:  Jason P Dinh
Journal:  Biol Lett       Date:  2022-02-09       Impact factor: 3.703

2.  The balance model of honest sexual signaling.

Authors:  Lutz Fromhage; Jonathan M Henshaw
Journal:  Evolution       Date:  2022-02-01       Impact factor: 4.171

3.  Sexual selection leads to positive allometry but not sexual dimorphism in the expression of horn shape in the blue wildebeest, Connochaetes taurinus.

Authors:  Chloé Gerstenhaber; Andrew Knapp
Journal:  BMC Ecol Evol       Date:  2022-09-11
  3 in total

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