Rico-Guevara Alejandro, Hurme Kristiina J
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, 3040 Valley Life Sciences Building, Berkeley, CA, 94720, U.S.A.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, 75 N. Eagleville Rd, Unit 3043, Storrs, CT, 06269, U.S.A.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2019 Feb;94(1):60-101. doi: 10.1111/brv.12436. Epub 2018 Jun 20.
We propose a practical concept that distinguishes the particular kind of weaponry that has evolved to be used in combat between individuals of the same species and sex, which we term intrasexually selected weapons (ISWs). We present a treatise of ISWs in nature, aiming to understand their distinction and evolution from other secondary sex traits, including from 'sexually selected weapons', and from sexually dimorphic and monomorphic weaponry. We focus on the subset of secondary sex traits that are the result of same-sex combat, defined here as ISWs, provide not previously reported evolutionary patterns, and offer hypotheses to answer questions such as: why have only some species evolved weapons to fight for the opposite sex or breeding resources? We examined traits that seem to have evolved as ISWs in the entire animal phylogeny, restricting the classification of ISW to traits that are only present or enlarged in adults of one of the sexes, and are used as weapons during intrasexual fights. Because of the absence of behavioural data and, in many cases, lack of sexually discriminated series from juveniles to adults, we exclude the fossil record from this review. We merge morphological, ontogenetic, and behavioural information, and for the first time thoroughly review the tree of life to identify separate evolution of ISWs. We found that ISWs are only found in bilateral animals, appearing independently in nematodes, various groups of arthropods, and vertebrates. Our review sets a reference point to explore other taxa that we identify with potential ISWs for which behavioural or morphological studies are warranted. We establish that most ISWs come in pairs, are located in or near the head, are endo- or exoskeletal modifications, are overdeveloped structures compared with those found in females, are modified feeding structures and/or locomotor appendages, are most common in terrestrial taxa, are frequently used to guard females, territories, or both, and are also used in signalling displays to deter rivals and/or attract females. We also found that most taxa lack ISWs, that females of only a few species possess better-developed weapons than males, that the cases of independent evolution of ISWs are not evenly distributed across the phylogeny, and that animals possessing the most developed ISWs have non-hunting habits (e.g. herbivores) or are faunivores that prey on very small prey relative to their body size (e.g. insectivores). Bringing together perspectives from studies on a variety of taxa, we conceptualize that there are five ways in which a sexually dimorphic trait, apart from the primary sex traits, can be fixed: sexual selection, fecundity selection, parental role division, differential niche occupation between the sexes, and interference competition. We discuss these trends and the factors involved in the evolution of intrasexually selected weaponry in nature.
我们提出了一个实用概念,用以区分已进化到可用于同一物种和性别的个体之间战斗的特定类型武器,我们将其称为同性选择武器(ISWs)。我们呈现了一篇关于自然界中ISWs的论文,旨在理解它们与其他第二性征的区别及进化过程,包括与“性选择武器”、两性异形武器和单形武器的区别。我们聚焦于作为同性战斗结果的第二性征子集,在此定义为ISWs,提供此前未报道的进化模式,并提出假设以回答诸如:为什么只有一些物种进化出武器来争夺异性或繁殖资源?我们研究了在整个动物系统发育中似乎已进化为ISWs的特征,将ISW的分类限制在仅在某一性别的成年个体中出现或增大且在同性战斗中用作武器的特征。由于缺乏行为数据,且在许多情况下缺乏从幼体到成体的性别区分序列,我们在本综述中排除了化石记录。我们整合了形态学、个体发育和行为信息,并首次全面审视生命之树以识别ISWs的独立进化。我们发现ISWs仅在两侧对称动物中出现,独立出现在线虫、各类节肢动物和脊椎动物中。我们的综述设定了一个参考点,以探索其他我们认为具有潜在ISWs的类群,对其进行行为或形态学研究是有必要的。我们确定大多数ISWs成对出现,位于头部或头部附近,是内骨骼或外骨骼的修饰,与雌性相比是过度发育的结构,是经过修饰的进食结构和/或运动附肢,在陆生类群中最为常见,经常用于保护雌性、领地或两者,也用于信号展示以威慑对手和/或吸引雌性。我们还发现大多数类群缺乏ISWs,只有少数物种的雌性拥有比雄性更发达的武器,ISWs的独立进化情况在系统发育中分布不均,拥有最发达ISWs的动物具有非捕猎习性(如食草动物)或相对于其体型而言捕食非常小猎物的食虫动物习性。综合各种类群研究的观点,我们概念化地认为,除了主要性征外,两性异形特征得以固定存在五种方式:性选择、繁殖力选择、亲代角色分工、两性之间的不同生态位占据以及干扰竞争。我们讨论了这些趋势以及自然界中同性选择武器进化所涉及的因素。