Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, 32 Campus Dr, Missoula, MT, 59812, USA.
Functional Morphology and Biomechanics, Zoological Institute, Kiel University, Am Botanischen Garten 9, 24098, Kiel, Germany.
BMC Ecol Evol. 2022 Mar 28;22(1):39. doi: 10.1186/s12862-022-01993-z.
In most arthropods, adult females are larger than males, and male competition is a race to quickly locate and mate with scattered females (scramble competition polygyny). Variation in body size among males may confer advantages that depend on context. Smaller males may be favored due to more efficient locomotion leading to higher mobility during mate searching. Alternatively, larger males may benefit from increased speed and higher survivorship. While the relationship between male body size and mobility has been investigated in several systems, how different aspects of male body morphology specifically affect their locomotor performance in different contexts is often unclear.
Using a combination of empirical measures of flight performance and modelling of body aerodynamics, we show that large body size impairs flight performance in male leaf insects (Phyllium philippinicum), a species where relatively small and skinny males fly through the canopy in search of large sedentary females. Smaller males were more agile in the air and ascended more rapidly during flight. Our models further predicted that variation in body shape would affect body lift and drag but suggested that flight costs may not explain the evolution of strong sexual dimorphism in body shape in this species. Finally, empirical measurements of substrate adhesion and subsequent modelling of landing impact forces suggested that smaller males had a lower risk of detaching from the substrates on which they walk and land.
By showing that male body size impairs their flight and substrate adhesion performance, we provide support to the hypothesis that smaller scrambling males benefit from an increased locomotor performance and shed light on the evolution of sexual dimorphism in scramble competition mating systems.
在大多数节肢动物中,成年雌性比雄性大,而雄性竞争是一场快速定位和与分散的雌性交配的竞赛( scramble 竞争多配偶制)。雄性之间的体型差异可能会带来取决于环境的优势。较小的雄性可能由于更高效的运动而具有优势,从而在寻找配偶时具有更高的机动性。或者,较大的雄性可能受益于更快的速度和更高的存活率。虽然已经在多个系统中研究了雄性体型与机动性之间的关系,但不同方面的雄性体型结构如何具体影响它们在不同环境中的运动性能通常尚不清楚。
我们结合飞行性能的经验测量和身体空气动力学建模,表明体型较大会损害雄性叶蝉( Phyllium philippinicum )的飞行性能,在这种物种中,相对较小而瘦长的雄性会在树冠中飞行,以寻找体型较大的静止雌性。较小的雄性在空中更敏捷,在飞行中上升得更快。我们的模型进一步预测,体型形状的变化会影响身体升力和阻力,但表明飞行成本可能无法解释该物种中体型强烈两性异形的进化。最后,对基质附着力的实际测量以及随后对着陆冲击力的建模表明,较小的雄性从其行走和着陆的基质上脱落的风险较低。
通过表明雄性体型会损害其飞行和基质附着力性能,我们为较小的 scramble 雄性从增加的运动性能中受益的假设提供了支持,并阐明了 scramble 竞争交配系统中两性异形进化的原因。