首页> 外文OA文献 >Differences in Sexual Dimorphism and Influences of Sexual Dichromatism on Crypsis Among Populations of the Jumping Spider Habronattus oregonensis
【2h】

Differences in Sexual Dimorphism and Influences of Sexual Dichromatism on Crypsis Among Populations of the Jumping Spider Habronattus oregonensis

机译:性别二态性的差异及性二色性对跳跃性蜘蛛Habronattus oregonensis种群中隐孢子虫的影响

代理获取
本网站仅为用户提供外文OA文献查询和代理获取服务,本网站没有原文。下单后我们将采用程序或人工为您竭诚获取高质量的原文,但由于OA文献来源多样且变更频繁,仍可能出现获取不到、文献不完整或与标题不符等情况,如果获取不到我们将提供退款服务。请知悉。

摘要

Crypsis can be an important mechanism of predator avoidance for organisms. However, many species exhibit sexual dichromatism, in which the males possess a suite of colorations in order to attract female attention. The resulting differences in crypsis between the males and females can provide insight into the relative strengths of the sexually and naturally selective forces shaping the coloration of the organism, as well as clues regarding potential sensory biases of the selecting sex. In this study, I examine variation in the coloration of four Pacific Northwest populations of the sexually dimorphic and dichromatic polygynous species of jumping spider Habronattus oregonensis and compare the coloration of different body regions of the spiders to their habitats. I also investigate differences in relative size of a male sexual ornament, the enlarged first leg tibia. Field work for this study was conducted in June and July of 2009. The three main foci of this study are 1) to compare the degree of color matching of females and their habitat to the degree of color matching of males and their habitat, evaluating whether sexual selection on males has reduced their degree of crypsis relative to that of females, 2) if there is indeed a difference in crypsis between the sexes, to gauge whether there are similar divergences from crypsis among the populations - both in the quantitative amount of divergences as well as the colorimetric direction of such divergences, and 3) whether there is any variation in sexual ornament size among populations. Male first leg tibia size is a sexual character that is presumably not influenced by habitat coloration; differences in male tibia allometry among populations would provide supporting evidence for the hypothesis that sexual selection is indeed maintaining phenotypic differences among the populations, regardless of habitat location and color. I found a high degree of conformity of hue and chroma between male and female spiders and their habitats, with three notable exceptions. The most extreme difference in coloration between spider and habitat was that of the Gorge and Siskiyou population male anteriors. The anteriors had proportionally less green and more ultraviolet reflectance than their habitat. Second, the Mt. Hood and Tillamook population male abdomens diverged from their habitat in a similar, although less pronounced manner to that of the Gorge and Siskiyou population male anteriors: they had proportionally less green and more UV reflectance. Third, female abdomens of all populations were highly variable in chroma, despite having hues that generally matched their habitat. Tibia area relative to body size of Gorge and Siskiyou population males was significantly smaller than that of Mt. Hood and Tillamook population males. The lower level of background hue matching among males compared to females implies that sexual selection has directly conflicted with natural selection, resulting in impaired crypsis. While the reduced crypsis of the Gorge and Siskiyou population males is centered on their anterior (the primary body region presented to the females during courtship), the deviations from crypsis in the Mt. Hood and Tillamook population males are highest on their abdomen, although the degree of contrast is lower than that of the Gorge and Siskiyou population anteriors. These differences in coloration between the Mt. Hood and Tillamook population male abdomens and their habitats are in the same colorimetric direction as those of the Gorge and Siskiyou population anteriors and their habitat; this may indicate a sensory bias of the females, conserved in all four populations, selecting for male reflectance with a higher UV to green ratio. The fact that Mt. Hood and Tillamook population male abdomens have a more modest reduction in background matching compared to Gorge and Siskiyou population male anteriors may be due to the search methods of flying predators (e.g., spider wasps); the dorsum would presumably be more conspicuous to predators than the anterior, and would thus be subject to more intense selection for crypsis despite sexual selection to the contrary. The variability of abdomen coloration of females of both morphs may indicate that selection for crypsis is less strong among females than among males. One possible reason for this would be if females spent less time in the exposed courtship habitat than males, a conclusion implied by a highly male-skewed sex ratio encountered during field collections. Like the differences in coloration between different males of different populations, the significant differences in male tibia size also imply variability in the intensity of sexual selection. Relative importance of male coloration and tibia size may be weighted differently among populations, operating under similar constraints on reductions in survival accrued by developing these characters. The high degree of variation found among the populations implies that there is a degree of reproductive isolation among the chromatically and morphologically dissimilar populations. However, the similarity of the environments in which the populations existed, the close geographic proximity of some of the dissimilar populations, and the lack of any substantial geographic boundaries between the populations imply that this isolation is not maintained through extrinsic factors. Rather, it would seem that the interpopulational diversity is maintained by sexual selection. However, evidence from morphology and coloration suggest that the generation of this diversity is not evolving exclusively under sexual selection pressure, but rather is constrained to a degree by natural selection.
机译:隐孢子虫可能是避免生物捕食的重要机制。但是,许多物种都表现出性双色性,其中雄性具有一系列着色以吸引雌性注意。雄性和雌性之间的低温差异可以提供洞察力,以了解塑造生物体颜色的性选择力和自然选择力的相对强度,以及有关选择性别的潜在感觉偏差的线索。在这项研究中,我研究了西北太平洋跳动蜘蛛Habronattus oregonensis的有性双态和双色多性种的四个太平洋种群的颜色变化,并比较了蜘蛛不同身体区域与其栖息地的颜色。我还研究了男性性装饰品(扩大的第一腿胫骨)相对大小的差异。这项研究的现场工作于2009年6月和7月进行。该研究的三个主要重点是:1)比较雌性及其栖息地的配色程度与雄性及其栖息地的配色程度,评估是否男性的性别选择相对于女性而言,降低了他们的啼哭程度; 2)如果两性之间确实存在不同的啼哭,以衡量人群之间是否存在与啼哭相似的差异-两者在数量上的差异以及这种差异的比色方向,以及3)人群之间性装饰品的大小是否存在变化。男性的第一腿胫骨大小是一种性格,可能不受栖息地颜色的影响;种群之间男性胫骨异形体异度的差异将为以下假设提供支持性证据:性别选择的确在种群之间保持表型差异,而与栖息地的位置和颜色无关。我发现雄性和雌性蜘蛛及其栖息地之间的色相和色度高度一致,但三个显着例外。蜘蛛和栖息地之间颜色的最极端差异是峡谷和锡斯基尤族男性前壁的颜色差异。与它们的栖息地相比,前壁的绿色和紫外线反射率成比例地降低。第二,山。胡德和蒂拉穆克种群的男性腹部以类似的方式从其栖息地发散,尽管与峡谷和锡斯基尤种群的男性前壁的情形相比不太明显:它们成比例地减少了绿色并且具有更多的紫外线反射率。第三,尽管所有人群的女性腹部的色相通常与其栖息地相符,但它们的色度差异很大。与Gorge和Siskiyou种群雄性的体型相关的胫骨面积明显小于Mt.胡德和提拉穆克族的男性。男性与女性相比,背景色匹配度较低,这意味着性别选择与自然选择直接冲突,从而导致哭泣感受损。虽然峡谷和锡斯基尤(Siskiyou)雄性种群的降低的低温疫病集中在其前部(求爱时呈现给雌性的主要身体区域),但山中的低温疫病却有所不同。胡德和提拉穆克族的男性腹部最高,尽管对比程度低于峡谷和锡斯基尤族的前部。这些山之间的颜色差异。胡德和蒂拉穆克种群的男性腹部及其生境与峡谷和锡斯基尤种群前壁及其栖息地的色度方向相同;这可能表明在所有四个种群中均处于保守状态的雌性的感官偏向,选择了具有较高紫外线对绿色比率的雄性反射率。事实上,山。与Gorge和Siskiyou种群男性前壁相比,胡德和Tillamook种群男性腹部的背景匹配降低幅度较小,这可能是由于飞行掠食者(例如蜘蛛黄蜂)的搜索方法所致;掠食者比前者更容易看到背背,因此尽管有相反的性选择,但背cry的选择更加激烈。两种形态的雌性的腹部颜色变化可能表明,雌性对低温的选择不如雄性。造成这种情况的一个可能原因是,女性在外露的求爱栖息地中所花的时间少于男性,这是由田间采集过程中男性偏高的性别比例所得出的结论。就像不同人群中不同男性之间的肤色差异一样,男性胫骨大小的显着差异也暗示着性选择强度的差异。男性着色和胫骨大小的相对重要性在人群中可能有不同的加权,在通过开发这些角色而导致的生存减少方面受到类似的限制。在种群之间发现的高度变异意味着在色度和形态上不相似的种群之间存在一定程度的生殖隔离。但是,这些种群所处环境的相似性,一些不同种群之间的地理接近性以及这些种群之间没有任何实质性的地理界限,意味着这种隔离不会通过外部因素来维持。相反,似乎种群间的多样性是通过性别选择来维持的。然而,来自形态和颜色的证据表明,这种多样性的产生并非仅在性选择压力的作用下演变,而是受到自然选择的限制。

著录项

  • 作者

    Bazzano Jason;

  • 作者单位
  • 年度 2011
  • 总页数
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种
  • 中图分类

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号