Male-mimicking females increase male-male interactions, and decrease male survival and condition in a female-polymorphic damselfly
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Biologists are still discovering diverse and powerful ways sexual conflicts shape biodiversity. The present study examines how the proportion of females in a population that exhibit male mimicry, a mating resistance trait, influences conspecific malesâ behavior, condition and survival. Like most female-polymorphic damselflies, Ischnura ramburii harbors both âandromorphâ females, which closely resemble males, and sexually dimorphic âgynomorphâ counterparts. There is evidence that male mimicry helps andromorphs evade detection and harassment, but males can also learn to target locally prevalent morph(s) via prior mate encounters. I hypothesized that the presence of male mimics could therefore predispose males to mate recognition errors, and thereby increase rates of costly male-male interactions. Consistent with this hypothesis, male-male interaction rates were highest in mesocosms containing more andromorph (vs. gynomorph) females. Males in andromorph-biased mesocosms also had lower fina...
创建时间:
2025-07-05



