Elsevier

Animal Behaviour

Volume 152, June 2019, Pages 63-69
Animal Behaviour

Operational sex ratio and density predict the potential for sexual selection in the broad-horned beetle

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2019.03.019Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Operational sex ratio and density can change opportunity of sexual selection (Is).

  • The legitimacy of Is to measure the upper limit of sexual selection is debated.

  • In a horned beetle, a male-biased OSR and high density increased Is.

  • Male-male competition and mating explained the change in Is in this system.

  • OSR and density manipulations to change Is have merit in some systems.

Sexual selection can act on all aspects of the phenotype and the opportunity for selection (Is) sets its maximal strength. Popular approaches to alter Is include the manipulation of the operational sex ratio (OSR) and/or density, with an increase in Is predicted with a male-biased OSR and at higher density. However, debate continues regarding the utility of Is to measure meaningful changes in the strength of selection, as changes in Is with OSR and density may only reflect stochastic processes. Here we tested whether the manipulation of OSR and density alters Is in the broad-horned flour beetle, Gnatocerus cornutus, a species where males are under intense sexual selection and the targets of selection are known. We also recorded the average number of fights and mating behaviour of individuals in our competitive arenas. We found significant main effects of OSR and density on Is, with the opportunity for selection being highest in male-biased high-density treatments. There were also significant effects of OSR and density on the average number of matings, whereas only density influenced the average number of fights. These results suggest that manipulation of OSR and density influence the opportunity for sexual selection in G. cornutus and our observations of fighting and mating behaviour provide a proximate mechanism for the change in Is.

Keywords

gnatocerus cornutus
mate monopolization
mating system
sexual selection

Cited by (0)