Behavioral estimates of mating success corroborate genetic evidence for pre-copulatory selection
In promiscuous species, fitness estimates obtained from genetic parentage may often reflect both pre- and post-copulatory components of sexual selection. Directly observing copulations can help isolate the role of pre-copulatory selection, but such behavioral data are difficult to obtain in the wild...
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Zusammenfassung: | In promiscuous species, fitness estimates obtained from genetic parentage
may often reflect both pre- and post-copulatory components of sexual
selection. Directly observing copulations can help isolate the role of
pre-copulatory selection, but such behavioral data are difficult to obtain
in the wild and may also overlook post-copulatory factors that alter the
relationship between mating success and reproductive success. To overcome
these limitations, we combined genetic parentage analysis with behavioral
estimates of size-specific mating in a wild population of brown anole
lizards (Anolis sagrei). Males of this species are twice as large as
females and multiple mating among females is common, suggesting the scope
for both pre- and post-copulatory processes to shape sexual selection on
male body size. Our genetic estimates of reproductive success revealed
strong positive directional selection for male size, which was also
strongly associated with the number of mates inferred from parentage. In
contrast, a male’s size was not associated with the fecundity of his mates
or his competitive fertilization success. By simultaneously tracking
copulations in the wild via the transfer of colored powder to females by
males from different size quartiles, we independently confirmed that large
males were more likely than small males to mate. We conclude that body
size is primarily under pre-copulatory sexual selection in brown anoles,
and that post-copulatory processes do not substantially alter this
pre-copulatory selection. Our study also illustrates the utility of
combining both behavioral and genetic methods to estimate mating success
to disentangle pre- and post-copulatory processes in promiscuous species. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.41ns1rnmn |