4.7 Article

The hidden cost of sexually selected traits: the metabolic expense of maintaining a sexually selected weapon

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2018.1685

Keywords

sexually selected weapons; resting metabolic rate; hypermetric allometry; energy budgets; tissue-specific metabolic rate; honest signalling

Funding

  1. University of Florida Graduate Student Fellowship through the UF School of Natural Resources and Environment
  2. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Shortterm Fellowship
  3. Society for the Study of Evolution Rosemary Grant Award
  4. National Science Foundation [NSF IOS-1553100]

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Sexually selected weapons are among the most exaggerated traits in nature. Sexual selection theory frequently assumes a high cost of this exaggeration; yet, those costs are rarely measured. We know very little about the energetic resources required to maintain these traits at rest and the difference in energetic costs for the largest individuals relative to the smallest individuals. Knowledge in this area is crucial; resting metabolic rate can account for 30-40% of daily energy expenditure in wild animals. Here, we capitalized on the phenomenon of autotomy to take a unique look at weapon maintenance costs. Using Leptoscelis tricolor (Hemiptera: Coreidae), we measured CO2 production rates before and after a weapon was shed. Males in this insect species use enlarged hind femora as weapons in male-male combat, and yet can shed them readily, without regeneration, upon entrapment. We found that metabolic rate decreased by an average of 23.5% in males after leg loss and by 7.9% in females. Notably, larger males had less of a drop in metabolic rate per gram of weapon lost. Our findings suggest that sexually selected weapons contribute to a large portion of resting metabolic rate in males, but these costs do not scale in direct proportion to size; larger males can have larger weapons for a reduced metabolic cost. These energetic maintenance costs may be integral to the evolution of the allometries of sexually selected weapons, and yet they remain largely unexplored.

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