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首页> 外文期刊>Evolutionary Ecology >Did sexually dimorphic dorsal coloration evolve by a pre-existing bias in males in the lizard Sceloporus minor?
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Did sexually dimorphic dorsal coloration evolve by a pre-existing bias in males in the lizard Sceloporus minor?

机译:雄性蜥蜴小孢子虫中男性先前存在的偏见会导致性二态性背色演变吗?

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Theory and empirical evidence indicate that male secondary sex traits can evolve by co-option of pre-existing biases in females. However, relatively few studies have explored whether male pre-existing biases could drive the evolution of traits important in male contests. Male spiny lizards (Sceloporus) are characterized by the expression of sexually dimorphic blue throat and abdominal patches. These features are revealed to conspecifics during social interactions, and variation in ventral color can predict the outcome of male contests in some species of spiny lizards. In Sceloporus minor, males in some populations also express bright blue color on the dorsal surfaces. Given the significance of blue color in intrasexual signaling in other species of Sceloporus, blue dorsal color may have evolved in S. minor by co-option of a male sensory bias for the color blue. We tested this hypothesis in a population that exhibits an ancestral phenotype for male dorsal color (brown/orange), and lacks males with bright blue dorsal coloration. Resident territorial males were presented with one of three types of intruder males manipulated in dorsal color by painting. Orange males mimicked the ancestral dorsal phenotype found at the study site; blue males resembled those from a population with the derived (blue) form of this trait; and green males represented a novel stimulus control. If blue dorsal color evolved in S. minor in part due to co-option of a male sensory bias, we predicted that resident males would exhibit either increased or decreased levels of aggression to blue intruders relative to controls. We found no difference in resident aggressive behavior across all treatments, thus failing to support the predictions of a pre-existing bias. We discuss these findings in the context of social behavior in Sceloporus, and propose directions for further study in this species.
机译:理论和经验证据表明,男性的第二性特征可以通过女性中既有偏见的共同选择而发展。然而,相对较少的研究探讨了男性先前存在的偏见是否可以推动男性比赛中重要特征的演变。雄性多刺蜥蜴(Sceloporus)的特征是性双态蓝喉和腹部斑块的表达。这些特征在社交互动过程中向同种人揭示,腹面颜色的变化可以预测某些类型的多刺蜥蜴中男性竞赛的结果。在小孢子虫中,某些种群中的雄性在背侧表面也表现出亮蓝色。考虑到蓝色在其他物种的Seloporus中的性信号传导中的重要性,通过选择男性对蓝色的感觉偏差,蓝色背色可能已在小链球菌中进化。我们在显示男性背色(棕色/橙色)祖先表型且缺乏男性背色为亮蓝色的人群中测试了这一假设。呈现给居民领地男性以绘画方式操纵背色的三种类型的入侵者男性之一。橙色的雄性模仿了在研究地点发现的祖先的背面表型。蓝色的雄性与具有这种特征的(蓝色)形式的种群相似。绿色的男性代表了一种新颖的刺激控制。如果蓝背色部分地由于男性感官偏向的选择而在小链球菌中演变,我们预测相对于对照,常住的男性对蓝色入侵者的侵略水平将提高或降低。我们发现在所有治疗中,居民的攻击行为均无差异,因此未能支持先前存在偏见的预测。我们讨论在Seloporus中的社会行为的背景下这些发现,并提出进一步研究该物种的方向。

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