Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Seewiesen, Germany
Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2017 Nov 19;372(1734). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2016.0249.
Sexual selection favours the expression of traits in one sex that attract members of the opposite sex for mating. The nature of sexually selected traits such as vocalization, colour and ornamentation, their fitness benefits as well as their costs have received ample attention in field and laboratory studies. However, sexually selected traits may not always be expressed: coloration and ornaments often follow a seasonal pattern and behaviours may be displayed only at specific times of the day. Despite the widely recognized differences in the daily and seasonal timing of traits and their consequences for reproductive success, the actions of sexual selection on the temporal organization of traits has received only scant attention. Drawing on selected examples from bird and mammal studies, here we summarize the current evidence for the daily and seasonal timing of traits. We highlight that molecular advances in chronobiology have opened exciting new opportunities for identifying the genetic targets that sexual selection may act on to shape the timing of trait expression. Furthermore, known genetic links between daily and seasonal timing mechanisms lead to the hypothesis that selection on one timescale may simultaneously also affect the other. We emphasize that studies on the timing of sexual displays of both males and females from wild populations will be invaluable for understanding the nature of sexual selection and its potential to act on differences within and between the sexes in timing. Molecular approaches will be important for pinpointing genetic components of biological rhythms that are targeted by sexual selection, and to clarify whether these represent core or peripheral components of endogenous clocks. Finally, we call for a renewed integration of the fields of evolution, behavioural ecology and chronobiology to tackle the exciting question of how sexual selection contributes to the evolution of biological clocks.This article is part of the themed issue 'Wild clocks: integrating chronobiology and ecology to understand timekeeping in free-living animals'.
性选择有利于表达吸引异性进行交配的特征。在野外和实验室研究中,人们已经对性选择特征(如发声、颜色和装饰)的性质、作为适合度的好处以及它们的代价给予了充分的关注。然而,性选择的特征并不总是表现出来的:颜色和装饰物通常遵循季节性模式,行为可能只在一天中的特定时间表现出来。尽管人们普遍认识到特征的日常和季节性时间安排及其对繁殖成功的影响存在差异,但性选择对特征的时间组织的作用却很少受到关注。本文从鸟类和哺乳动物研究中选择了一些例子,总结了特征的日常和季节性时间安排的当前证据。我们强调,生理节律学中的分子进展为确定性选择可能作用于塑造特征表达时间的遗传靶标开辟了令人兴奋的新机会。此外,关于日常和季节性时间安排机制的已知遗传联系导致了这样一种假设,即一个时间尺度上的选择可能同时也会影响另一个时间尺度。我们强调,对来自野生种群的雄性和雌性的性展示时间的研究将对于理解性选择的性质及其对性别内和性别间时间差异的潜在作用非常有价值。分子方法对于确定性选择作用的生物节律的遗传成分以及阐明这些成分是否代表内源性时钟的核心或外围成分将非常重要。最后,我们呼吁重新整合进化、行为生态学和生理节律学领域,以解决性选择如何有助于生物钟进化的这个令人兴奋的问题。本文是主题为“野生时钟:整合生理节律学和生态学以了解自由生活动物的计时”的专题的一部分。