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1.
Evolution ; 69(6): 1560-1572, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25929734

ABSTRACT

Mating with multiple partners is common across species, and understanding how individual males secure fertilization in the face of competition remains a fundamental goal of evolutionary biology. Game theory stipulates that males have a fixed budget for reproduction that can lead to a trade-off between investment in precopulatory traits such as body size, armaments, and ornaments, and postcopulatory traits such as testis size and spermatogenic efficiency. Recent theoretical and empirical studies have shown that if males can monopolize access to multiple females, they will invest disproportionately in precopulatory traits and less in postcopulatory traits. Using phylogenetically controlled comparative methods, we demonstrate that across 58 cetacean species with the most prominent sexual dimorphism in size, shape, teeth, tusks, and singing invest significantly less in relative testes mass. In support of theoretical predictions, these species tend to show evidence of male contests, suggesting there is opportunity for winners to monopolize access to multiple females. Our approach provides a robust dataset with which to make predictions about male mating strategies for the many cetacean species for which adequate behavioral observations do not exist.


Subject(s)
Body Size , Cetacea/physiology , Sexual Behavior, Animal , Animals , Biological Evolution , Competitive Behavior , Male , Mating Preference, Animal , Organ Size , Phylogeny , Reproduction , Sex Characteristics , Species Specificity , Testis/anatomy & histology
2.
Evolution ; 68(11): 3296-306, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25186496

ABSTRACT

Male genitalia evolve rapidly, probably as a result of sexual selection. Whether this pattern extends to the internal infrastructure that influences genital movements remains unknown. Cetaceans (whales and dolphins) offer a unique opportunity to test this hypothesis: since evolving from land-dwelling ancestors, they lost external hind limbs and evolved a highly reduced pelvis that seems to serve no other function except to anchor muscles that maneuver the penis. Here, we create a novel morphometric pipeline to analyze the size and shape evolution of pelvic bones from 130 individuals (29 species) in the context of inferred mating system. We present two main findings: (1) males from species with relatively intense sexual selection (inferred by relative testes size) tend to evolve larger penises and pelvic bones compared to their body length, and (2) pelvic bone shape has diverged more in species pairs that have diverged in inferred mating system. Neither pattern was observed in the anterior-most pair of vertebral ribs, which served as a negative control. This study provides evidence that sexual selection can affect internal anatomy that controls male genitalia. These important functions may explain why cetacean pelvic bones have not been lost through evolutionary time.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Cetacea/anatomy & histology , Cetacea/genetics , Genitalia, Male/physiology , Pelvic Bones/anatomy & histology , Animals , Cetacea/physiology , Female , Male , Penis/anatomy & histology , Selection, Genetic , Sex Characteristics , Sexual Behavior , Testis/anatomy & histology
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