4.5 Article

Morph-specific investment in testes mass in a trimorphic beetle, Proagoderus watanabei

期刊

JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY
卷 316, 期 3, 页码 169-177

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jzo.12941

关键词

alternative tactics; dung beetle; horned beetle; intrasexual competition; polymorphism; polyphenism; reproductive tactics; sperm competition

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资金

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council [NE/K016407/1]
  2. NTU start-up grant
  3. QMUL postgraduate studentship
  4. QMPGRF
  5. NERC [NE/K016407/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

When competition between males for mates is intense, some males may adopt alternative tactics for acquiring fertilizations, including developing into multiple morphs to cope with sperm competition. A study on the dung beetle species Proagoderus watanabei found that males exhibit trimorphism in traits such as weapon features and testes investment, indicating different levels of sperm competition risk among alpha, beta, and gamma males in the species.
When competition between males for mates is intense, it is common to find that some males will adopt alternative tactics for acquiring fertilizations, often involving the use of 'sneak' tactics whereby males avoid precopulatory contests. These alternative tactics are sometimes associated with discrete differences in male morphology, with sneak males investing less in weaponry but more in traits such as testes which may give an advantage in sperm competition. In some cases, it appears that males develop into more than two morphs, with a number of examples of tri- and even tetramorphic arthropod species being described. Here, we analyse the scaling relations of the dung beetle species Proagoderus watanabei, which expresses two distinct weapon traits: paired head horns and a pronotal horn. We find that males of this species are trimorphic, with alpha males expressing long head horns and a pronotal horn, beta males with long head horns but no pronotal horn and gamma males with short head horns only. We also find that alpha males invest relatively less in testes than do beta or gamma males, indicating that beta and gamma males in this species probably experience higher risks of sperm competition than do alphas.

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