Evolution of vertebrate brain size is associated with sexual traits

IF 1.4 4区 生物学 Q2 ZOOLOGY
M. Zhong, Long Jin, Jian Ping Yu, W. Liao
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The expensive tissue hypothesis predicts a trade-off between investments in the brain and other energetically costly organs due to the costs associated with their growth and maintenance within the finite energy resources available. However, few studies address the strength of relationships between brain size and investments in precopulatory (ornaments and armaments) and postcopulatory (testes and ejaculates) sexual traits. Here, in a broad comparative study, we tested the prediction that the relationship between brain size and investment in sexual traits differs among taxa relative to the importance of sperm competition within them. We found that brain size was negatively correlated with sexual size dimorphism (SSD) in anurans and primates, and it tended to decrease with SSD in ungulates and cetaceans. However, brain size did not covary significantly with armaments (e.g., canine length, horn, antler, and muscle mass). Brain size was not correlated with postcopulatory sexual traits (testes and ejaculates). The intensity of covariance between brain size and precopulatory sexual traits decreased with increasing relative testis size.
脊椎动物大脑大小的进化与性特征有关
昂贵的组织假说预测了对大脑和其他能量昂贵的器官的投资之间的权衡,因为它们在有限的可用能量资源内生长和维持的成本。然而,很少有研究涉及大脑大小与群体前(装饰物和武器)和群体后(睾丸和射精)性特征投资之间的关系强度。在这里,在一项广泛的比较研究中,我们测试了大脑大小和性特征投资之间的关系的预测,即相对于精子竞争的重要性,不同分类群之间的关系不同。我们发现,在无尾类和灵长类动物中,大脑大小与性大小二态性(SSD)呈负相关,而在有蹄类和鲸目动物中,它往往随着性大小二型性而减少。然而,大脑大小与军备(如犬的长度、角、鹿角和肌肉质量)没有显著的相关性。大脑大小与人口后的性特征(睾丸和射精)无关。大脑大小和繁殖前性特征之间的协方差强度随着睾丸相对大小的增加而降低。
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来源期刊
Animal Biology
Animal Biology 生物-动物学
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Animal Biology publishes high quality papers and focuses on integration of the various disciplines within the broad field of zoology. These disciplines include behaviour, developmental biology, ecology, endocrinology, evolutionary biology, genomics, morphology, neurobiology, physiology, systematics and theoretical biology. Purely descriptive papers will not be considered for publication. Animal Biology is the official journal of the Royal Dutch Zoological Society since its foundation in 1872. The journal was initially called Archives Néerlandaises de Zoologie, which was changed in 1952 to Netherlands Journal of Zoology, the current name was established in 2003.
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