Crowding, sex ratio and horn evolution in a South African beetle community

DOI
10.1098/rspb.2007.1498
Publication Year
2008
Publication Site
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Journal Volume
275
Page Numbers
315–321
Family
Scarabaeidae
General topic
Ecology
Morphology
Specific topic
community structure
Author

Pomfret, Joanne C; Knell, Robert J

Abstract Note

Sexually selected ornaments and weapons are exceptionally variable, even between closely related species. It has long been recognized that some of this diversity can be explained by differences in mating systems between species, but there remains substantial variation between species with similar mating systems. We investigated the roles of sex ratio (measured as operational sex ratio, OSR) and population density (measured as mean male crowding, a measure indicating the average number of conspecific males that an individual male animal will encounter) in determining horn presence in a community of South African dung beetles. Analysis of data from 14 species using a generalized least-squares model incorporating phylogenetic influences found that both OSR and mean crowding were significant predictors of horn presence, with hornless species tending to show female-biased sex ratios and high levels of crowding. The influence of mean crowding on horn diversity between species probably reflects the difficulty of guarding and monopolizing females when many competitors are present, meaning that males who adopt ‘scramble' tactics tend to be favoured.