4.2 Article

Beauty or function? The opposing effects of natural and sexual selection on cuticular hydrocarbons in male black field crickets

Journal

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 9, Pages 1266-1281

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.14198

Keywords

cuticular hydrocarbons; field cricket; natural selection; sexual selection

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The study reveals the interaction between sexual selection and natural selection in regulating male traits in black field crickets. Natural selection favors an increase in the total abundance of lipids and long-chain hydrocarbons, while sexual selection improves mating success through specific lipid components that increase evaporative water loss. These findings suggest that the balance between natural and sexual selection plays a crucial role in the evolution of male traits in T. commodus.
Although many theoretical models of male sexual trait evolution assume that sexual selection is countered by natural selection, direct empirical tests of this assumption are relatively uncommon. Cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) are known to play an important role not only in restricting evaporative water loss but also in sexual signalling in most terrestrial arthropods. Insects adjusting their CHC layer for optimal desiccation resistance is often thought to come at the expense of successful sexual attraction, suggesting that natural and sexual selection are in opposition for this trait. In this study, we sampled the CHCs of male black field crickets (Teleogryllus commodus) using solid-phase microextraction and then either measured their evaporative water loss or mating success. We then used multivariate selection analysis to quantify the strength and form of natural and sexual selection targeting male CHCs. Both natural and sexual selection imposed significant linear and stabilizing selection on male CHCs, although for very different combinations. Natural selection largely favoured an increase in the total abundance of CHCs, especially those with a longer chain length. In contrast, mating success peaked at a lower total abundance of CHCs and declined as CHC abundance increased. However, mating success did improve with an increase in a number of specific CHC components that also increased evaporative water loss. Importantly, this resulted in the combination of male CHCs favoured by natural selection and sexual selection being strongly opposing. Our findings suggest that the balance between natural and sexual selection is likely to play an important role in the evolution of male CHCs in T. commodus and may help explain why CHCs are so divergent across populations and species.

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