Iglesias-Carrasco Maider, Brookes Samuel, Kruuk Loeske E B, Head Megan L
Division of Ecology and Evolution Research School of Biology Australian National University Canberra ACT Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Sep 12;10(18):9808-9826. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6620. eCollection 2020 Sep.
In intraspecific competition, the sex of competing individuals is likely to be important in determining the outcome of competitive interactions and the way exposure to conspecifics during development influences adult fitness traits. Previous studies have explored differences between males and females in their response to intraspecific competition. However, few have tested how the sex of the competitors, or any interactions between focal and competitor sex, influences the nature and intensity of competition. We set up larval seed beetles to develop either alone or in the presence of a male or female competitor and measured a suite of traits: development time, emergence weight; male ejaculate mass, copulation duration, and lifespan; and female lifetime fecundity, offspring egg-adult survival, and lifespan. We found effects of competition and competitor sex on the development time and emergence weight of both males and females, and also of an interaction between focal and competitor sex: Females emerged lighter when competing with another female, while males did not. There was little effect of larval competition on male and female adult fitness traits, with the exception of the effect of a female competitor on a focal female's offspring survival rate. Our results highlight the importance of directly measuring the effects of competition on fitness traits, rather than distant proxies for fitness, and suggest that competition with the sex with the greater resource requirements (here females) might play a role in driving trait evolution. We also found that male-male competition during development resulted in shorter copulation times than male-female competition, a result that remained when controlling for the weight of competitors. Although it is difficult to definitively tease apart the effects of social environment and access to resources, this result suggests that something about the sex of competitors other than their size is driving this pattern.
在种内竞争中,竞争个体的性别对于决定竞争互动的结果以及发育过程中接触同种个体的方式如何影响成年适应性特征可能至关重要。先前的研究探讨了雄性和雌性在对种内竞争的反应上的差异。然而,很少有研究测试竞争者的性别,或焦点个体与竞争者性别之间的任何相互作用,如何影响竞争的性质和强度。我们设置了幼虫种子甲虫,使其单独发育或在有雄性或雌性竞争者的情况下发育,并测量了一系列特征:发育时间、羽化重量;雄性射精量、交配持续时间和寿命;以及雌性终生繁殖力、后代从卵到成虫的存活率和寿命。我们发现竞争和竞争者性别对雄性和雌性的发育时间和羽化重量都有影响,并且焦点个体与竞争者性别之间也存在相互作用:雌性与另一只雌性竞争时羽化时体重较轻,而雄性则不然。幼虫竞争对雄性和雌性成年适应性特征几乎没有影响,除了雌性竞争者对焦点雌性后代存活率的影响。我们的结果强调了直接测量竞争对适应性特征的影响的重要性,而不是对适应性的间接替代指标,并表明与资源需求更大的性别(这里是雌性)竞争可能在推动性状进化中起作用。我们还发现,发育期间的雄性 - 雄性竞争导致交配时间比雄性 - 雌性竞争更短,在控制竞争者体重后这一结果仍然存在。尽管很难明确区分社会环境和资源获取的影响,但这一结果表明,竞争者性别的某些因素而非其大小在驱动这种模式。