TY - JOUR
T1 - Macroecology of Sexual Selection
T2 - A Predictive Conceptual Framework for Large-Scale Variation in Reproductive Traits
AU - Machado, Glauco
AU - Buzatto, Bruno A.
AU - García-Hernández, Solimary
AU - Macías-Ordóñez, Rogelio
PY - 2016/9
Y1 - 2016/9
N2 - Abiotic factors exert direct and indirect influences on behavioral, morphological, and life-history traits. Because some of these traits are related to reproduction, there is a causal link between climatic conditions and the expression of reproductive traits. This link allows us to generate predictions on how reproductive traits vary in large geographic scales. Here we formalize this macroecological framework, present some general predictions, and explore empirical examples using harvestmen as study organisms. Our results show that the length of breeding season in harvestmen is primarily influenced by the number of warm months and that precipitation plays a secondary role in modulating the period devoted to reproduction. Moreover, we show that the probability of resource defense polygyny increases with longer breeding seasons and that the presence of this type of mating system positively affects the magnitude of sexual dimorphism in harvestmen. Finally, the presence of postovipositional parental care is also influenced by the length of breeding season but not by actual evapotranspiration, which is our proxy for the intensity of biotic interactions. We argue that the macroecological framework proposed here may be a fruitful field of investigation, with important implications for our understanding of sexual selection and the evolution of reproductive traits in both animals and plants.
AB - Abiotic factors exert direct and indirect influences on behavioral, morphological, and life-history traits. Because some of these traits are related to reproduction, there is a causal link between climatic conditions and the expression of reproductive traits. This link allows us to generate predictions on how reproductive traits vary in large geographic scales. Here we formalize this macroecological framework, present some general predictions, and explore empirical examples using harvestmen as study organisms. Our results show that the length of breeding season in harvestmen is primarily influenced by the number of warm months and that precipitation plays a secondary role in modulating the period devoted to reproduction. Moreover, we show that the probability of resource defense polygyny increases with longer breeding seasons and that the presence of this type of mating system positively affects the magnitude of sexual dimorphism in harvestmen. Finally, the presence of postovipositional parental care is also influenced by the length of breeding season but not by actual evapotranspiration, which is our proxy for the intensity of biotic interactions. We argue that the macroecological framework proposed here may be a fruitful field of investigation, with important implications for our understanding of sexual selection and the evolution of reproductive traits in both animals and plants.
KW - Biotic interactions
KW - Life-history trade-offs
KW - Mating system
KW - Parental care
KW - Precipitation
KW - Sexual dimorphism
KW - Temperature
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85026602102&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/ARC/DE150101521
U2 - 10.1086/687575
DO - 10.1086/687575
M3 - Article
C2 - 27513913
AN - SCOPUS:85026602102
SN - 0003-0147
VL - 188
SP - S8-S27
JO - American Naturalist
JF - American Naturalist
IS - S1
ER -