Bleiweiss R
Department of Zoology and the Zoological Museum, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 1999 Dec 22;266(1437):2491-7. doi: 10.1098/rspb.1999.0951.
A survey of 166 hummingbird species reveals novel associations of bill-length sexual dimorphism (BLSD) with plumage and breeding behaviours. Across all species, female bills become proportionately longer than male bills (higher female-to-male BLSD ratio) as sexual dichromatism increases. However, male bills are proportionately longer (lower female-to-male BLSD ratio) in both lekkers (traditional group display) and clustered breeders (female harems or colonial nests) compared with dispersed breeders. The overall positive association of plumage with BLSD suggests that social status determines priority of access to nectar-providing flowers. Furthermore, the distinctive BLSD associated with breeding aggregations may arise from behaviours that impose constraints on the usual male priority at flowers: female dominance over males around nest colonies and male residence on lek-mating territories. These various factors appear to alter plumage and bill characters of both sexes to produce the range of dimorphisms within the various dispersed and aggregated breeding system categories. Feedback loops caused by ecological consequences of breeding behaviour may alter the evolutionary dynamics of breeding systems, bird-plant interactions, and competing pollinators, as well as help explain the lek paradox.
一项对166种蜂鸟的调查揭示了喙长两性异形(BLSD)与羽毛及繁殖行为之间的新关联。在所有物种中,随着两性异色性增加,雌鸟的喙相对于雄鸟变得更长(雌雄性BLSD比率更高)。然而,与分散繁殖者相比,在求偶场(传统群体展示)和集群繁殖者(雌性妻妾群或群居巢)中,雄鸟的喙相对更长(雌雄性BLSD比率更低)。羽毛与BLSD之间的总体正相关表明,社会地位决定了获取提供花蜜花朵的优先权。此外,与繁殖聚集相关的独特BLSD可能源于对雄鸟在花朵上通常优先权施加限制的行为:在巢群周围雌鸟对雄鸟的支配以及雄鸟在求偶交配领地的停留。这些不同因素似乎改变了两性的羽毛和喙的特征,从而在各种分散和聚集的繁殖系统类别中产生了两性异形的范围。繁殖行为的生态后果所导致的反馈回路可能会改变繁殖系统、鸟类与植物的相互作用以及竞争传粉者的进化动态,同时也有助于解释求偶场悖论。