Energetically costly weaponry in the large morph of male stag beetles

IF 1.9 3区 生物学 Q1 ZOOLOGY
H. Chen, S.-P. Huang, C.-P. Lin, Z.-Y. Chen, Y. Hsu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Males of many species develop disproportionately large weapons, and frequently the weapon size increases more quickly with body size in small than in large males—a trend often considered to result from the depletion of developmental resources limiting male weapon exaggeration. Based on the cost-minimization hypothesis, a shallower weapon-body size allometric slope in large than in small males could be selected for if the energetic maintenance costs of having oversized weapons increase faster in large than in small males. Whether males of different size groups that differ in the weapon-body size allometric relationship also differ in the energetic costs of maintaining their weapons has not yet been investigated. Consequently, we studied this using the stag beetle (Cyclommatus mniszechi), in which males are larger in size and have larger mandibles than do females and are divided into two morphs: majors are larger and have longer mandibles than minors. In both male morphs, mandible size increases disproportionately with their body size, but it increases more quickly in minors than in majors. We measured the standard metabolic rate (SMR) of the three types of these beetles (the two male morphs and females) to investigate whether the energetic maintenance cost of carrying weapons differs among them. Body weight explained 80% of the variation in the SMR in the three types of beetles, and SMR increased more quickly with body weight in major males than in minor males or females. Weapon and body size also jointly explained approximately 80% of the variation in the SMR. Whereas SMR increased with body size in all three types of beetles (with a higher rate of increase in major males than in minor males or females), only the major males' SMR increased with weapon size. Overall, being heavier and larger and carrying oversized weapons are energetically costly in major males, something which could constrain the exaggeration of their weapons.

Abstract Image

巨大的雄性鹿角甲虫形态中能量昂贵的武器
许多物种的雄性进化出了不成比例的大型武器,而且武器尺寸随着体型的增加往往比体型大的雄性更快——这种趋势通常被认为是由于发育资源的枯竭限制了雄性武器的夸张。基于成本最小化假设,如果拥有超大武器的能量维护成本在大型雄性中比在小型雄性中增加得更快,则可以选择大型雄性比小型雄性更浅的武器体尺寸异速斜率。不同体型的雄性在武器与体型的异速关系上是否存在差异,在维持武器的能量消耗上是否也存在差异,目前还没有研究。因此,我们用雄鹿甲虫(Cyclommatus mniszechi)研究了这一点,雄鹿甲虫比雌鹿体型更大,下颌骨也更大,并分为两个变种:大甲虫比小甲虫体型更大,下颌骨更长。在这两种雄性变种中,下颌骨的大小都与体型不成比例地增长,但小变种的下颌骨增长速度要快于大变种。我们测量了三种类型的甲虫(两种雄性和雌性)的标准代谢率(SMR),以研究它们携带武器的能量维持成本是否存在差异。体重解释了三种类型甲虫中80%的SMR变异,且大雄的SMR随体重的增加比小雄或小雌的SMR增加得更快。武器和体型也共同解释了大约80%的SMR变异。然而,三种类型的甲虫的SMR随体型的增大而增加(主要雄性的增加率高于次要雄性或雌性),只有主要雄性的SMR随武器尺寸的增大而增加。总的来说,体型更大更重,携带超大武器对雄性雄性来说能量消耗很大,这可能会限制它们武器的夸张程度。
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来源期刊
Journal of Zoology
Journal of Zoology 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
90
审稿时长
2.8 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Zoology publishes high-quality research papers that are original and are of broad interest. The Editors seek studies that are hypothesis-driven and interdisciplinary in nature. Papers on animal behaviour, ecology, physiology, anatomy, developmental biology, evolution, systematics, genetics and genomics will be considered; research that explores the interface between these disciplines is strongly encouraged. Studies dealing with geographically and/or taxonomically restricted topics should test general hypotheses, describe novel findings or have broad implications. The Journal of Zoology aims to maintain an effective but fair peer-review process that recognises research quality as a combination of the relevance, approach and execution of a research study.
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