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Evolution ; 53(2): 535-545, 1999 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28565418

RESUMO

Mating in social insects has generally been studied in relation to reproductive allocation and relatedness. Despite the tremendous morphological diversity in social insects, little is known about how individual morphology affects mating success. We examined the correlation of male size and shape with mating success in the western harvester ant, Pogonomyrmex occidentalis. Larger males had significantly higher mating success in two independent collections of males at mating aggregations. We also detected significant linear and nonlinear selection on aspects of male shape that were consistent across years. These shape components are independent of size, suggesting that male mating success is a complex function of size and shape. Successful males had elongate thoraxes and short mandibles relative to males collected at random at the lek. Overall, mated males also had longer postpetioles relative to body size, but there was also evidence of nonlinear selection on relative postpetiole length in both years. We found no evidence of assortative mating based on size or multivariate shape measures in either year, but in one year we found weak assortative mating based on some univariate traits.

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