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Reproduction Chapter 7. Sexual Selection Darwin's theory to explain traits that aren't obviously advantageous https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LL30QtTSz9U.

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Presentation on theme: "Reproduction Chapter 7. Sexual Selection Darwin's theory to explain traits that aren't obviously advantageous https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LL30QtTSz9U."— Presentation transcript:

1 Reproduction Chapter 7

2 Sexual Selection Darwin's theory to explain traits that aren't obviously advantageous https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LL30QtTSz9U

3 Bower Birds

4 She builds the nest, cares for the nestlings and he does….?

5 What does it mean, to build a bower? Females prefer neat bowers. Hypothesis: These are build by superior males. Evidence from parasites, brain studies/cerebellum (conflicting)

6 Consider the investment in gametes Gamete: egg or sperm Female: fewMale: many Creates competition for access to female gametes

7 Reproductive Strategies Female: “few high cost gametes means invest in parenting those offspring to increase my fitness”. Male: “many, cheap gametes means invest in getting lots of mating opportunities to increase my fitness”.

8 Evidence: Reproductive Success of Bowerbirds

9 Therefore, males should not provide anything beyond gametes! but...

10 Operational Sex Ratio The number of sexually active males: the number of sexually active females. The ratio indicates which sex selects a mate The ratio can change, such as….

11 Nuptial Gifts Remember the balloon flies? Lesser gifts, ratio is high, she selects. Valuable gifts, ratio is low, he selects. Why do males chose female dancing flies with large abdomens?

12 The ratio can vary over time

13 Sexual selection is more than mate choice. Competition among individuals seeking access, usually male-male competition. Look at body size and weapons, correlation with mating success. Dominance hierarchies.

14 And if you aren't the biggest/ best? Make friends with females (baboons) Make friends with other males (coalition, baboons) Brief encounters (iguanas) Satellites (crickets, toads) Forced copulation Males can alter these strategies over time.

15 Are all strategies flexible? No. Genetic populations of Ruff can be:1 Territory holder, 2 Satellite, or 3 Female mimic

16 How do these differences persist? Must have similar reproductive success if differences are genetic. Gamma, Beta and Alpha Variation among the strategies depending on conditions in the sponge.

17 Beyond direct competition: sperm competition Damselfly males remove most of the sperm from earlier matings. Female hens can expel semen.

18 Mate Guarding Physical barriers: orb web weaver dies in the female. Temporal: expensive (why?) Does it work? Seychelles warblers and EPCs.

19 So, mate choice What does a female (usually) want? Resources: territory, nuptial gifts, (spiders) Paternal investment: blue tits and carotenoids A “good” quality male: no material benefit

20 What makes a male good? 1 Healthy and won't make her sick 2 Good genes will benefit her fitness 3 Runaway Selection or “sexy sons” 4 Chase-away selection-no benefit

21 Healthy mate Male bowerbirds and high-quality bowers, fewer ectoparasites

22 Good genes Plumage as an honest signal of health Likely a strong, genetic component to health Found positive correlation between plumage brightness and parasite loads across species. What does this mean?

23 Runaway Selection Female choice drives male ornamentation Links genes for choice with genes for ornament Goes beyond an honest signal

24 So, which one? Chick survival

25 Conflict between the sexes Drosophila transfer proteins with sperm that increase his success and decrease hers! Females choose large males but they make more of the proteins and lower her success further. An arms race! Possibly chase-away selection

26 Mating Systems-Chapter 8 1 Monogamy 2 Polyandry 3 Polygyny And the many combinations within!

27 Why should a male be monogamous? 1 extension of guarding, little chance of another mating 2 mate-assistance, big increase to fitness, gryllus crickets 3 male needed to have any success, seahorse 4 female-enforced, burying beetles Not common in mammals

28 More common in birds Having both parents increases nestling survival in many birds But… 90% of bird species studied show EPC. So… He might be raising babies who aren't his! Explain microsatellite analysis.

29 Polyandry High, male-biased sex ratio, females with territories are rare and can attract multiple males. Spotted Sandpipers Female can lay more eggs Ratio favors males Locally rich food supply No fitness effort of 2 parents

30 Why do females seek additional matings? Pro Con Assure fertility Exposure to disease/parasite Good genes Risk of predation Genetic compatibilityEnergy expenditure Resources More caregivers Male protection Reduced infanticide Many females show higher fitness with EPC!

31 Polygyny How do you find lots of females? Female-defense: find the females, guard them Resource-defense: defend territory with resources Lek: defend a display territory Scramble competition: try to find and guard a receptive female. Lots of variation in male success

32 Lek Males gather, display and few get most of the matings. Why would this occur?

33 Lek Females are drawn to the location, not defensible= hotspot hypothesis Males are drawn to successful males to cash in = hotshot hypothesis Females gather to compare males = female preference hypothesis


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