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Reproductive Trade-Offs and Direct Costs for Males in Arthropods

期刊

EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
卷 40, 期 2, 页码 169-184

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11692-012-9213-4

关键词

Competition; Homosexual interactions; Metabolic rate; Missed-opportunity cost; Sexual conflict; Sexual selection

资金

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [PZ00P3_121777/1, PZ00P3_137514/1, 31003A_125144/1]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [31003A_125144, PZ00P3_137514, PZ00P3_121777] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Until 30 years ago, the emphasis on reproductive costs for males was mainly on costs related to mate searching, courtship and fighting with rival males. However, costs for males are substantial and varied and often resemble the more thoroughly studied female reproductive costs. Costs can be referred to as trade-off costs, where investment in reproductive activity comes at the expense of another important activity or fitness component. Investment in reproduction at the expense of longevity and future reproduction is the ultimate cost, because it affects fitness directly. In contrast, flawed performance (e.g., of the immune system) is perceived as a mechanistic trade-off, because it affects fitness indirectly through a mediator (i.e., parasites). Finally, direct costs refer to direct measurements of the energy expenditure during involvement in reproduction-related activities. Both direct and mechanistic trade-off costs often result in decreased longevity compared to unmated males (an ultimate cost). Males incur costs during different reproductive phases: before copulation, when producing sperm, while searching for, courting and copulating with females, and subsequently when guarding females or taking care of offspring. This synthesis follows previous pioneering reviews addressing specific aspects of male costs, but strives to summarize all known male reproductive cost types more comprehensively, including their classification. We suggest several directions for targeted future research. While costs for males have been fairly well described, it is now necessary to uncover the ecological and evolutionary factors responsible for differences between closely related species and systems and to better link between directly-measured costs, mechanistic trade-off costs and ultimate trade-off costs.

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