Field evidence challenges the often-presumed relationship between early male maturation and female-biased sexual size dimorphism
收藏DataONE2020-06-24 更新2025-04-19 收录
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Femaleâbiased sexual size dimorphism (SSD) is often considered an epiphenomenon of selection for the increased mating opportunities provided by early male maturation (i.e., protandry). Empirical evidence of the adaptive significance of protandry remains nonetheless fairly scarce. We use field data collected throughout the reproductive season of an SSD crab spider, Mecaphesa celer, to test two hypotheses: Protandry provides fitness benefits to males, leading to femaleâbiased SSD, or protandry is an indirect consequence of selection for small male size/large female size. Using fieldâcollected data, we modeled the probability of mating success for females and males according to their timing of maturation. We found that males matured earlier than females and the proportion of virgin females decreased abruptly early in the season, but unexpectedly increased afterward. Timing of female maturation was not related to clutch size, but large females tended to have more offspring than small female...
创建时间:
2025-04-12



