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Population differences in density and resource allocation of ornamental tail feathers in the barn swallow
Authors:JOSÉ MIGUEL APARICIO  ALBERTO MUÑOZ  RAÚL BONAL  ANDERS PAPE MØLLER
Affiliation:1. Grupo de Investigación de la Biodiversidad Genética y Cultural, IREC‐(CSIC‐UCLM‐JCCM), Ronda de Toledo s/n, E‐13005 Ciudad Real, Spain;2. Departamento de Didáctica de las Ciencias Experimentales. Facultad de Educación. Universidad Complutense de Madrid. C/ Rector Royo Villanueva, s/n 28040 Madrid, Spain;3. CREAF, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Campus de Bellaterra, E‐08193 Cerdanyola del Vallès, Barcelona, Spain;4. Laboratoire Ecologie, Systematique et Evolution, UMR 8079 CNRS‐Université Paris‐Sud XI‐AgroParisTech, Batiment 362 Université Paris‐Sud XI, F‐91405 Orsay Cedex, France
Abstract:
Many organisms show well‐defined latitudinal clines in morphology, which appear to be caused by spatially varying natural selection, resulting in different optimal phenotypes in each location. Such spatial variability raises an interesting question, with different prospects for the action of sexual selection on characters that have a dual purpose, such as locomotion and sexual attraction. The outermost tail feathers of barn swallows (Hirundo rustica) represent one such character, and their evolution has been a classic model subject to intense debate. In the present study, we examined individuals from four European populations to analyze geographical variation in the length and mass of tail feathers in relation to body size and wing size. Tail feather length differed between sexes and populations, and such variation was a result of the effects of natural selection, acting through differences in body size and wing size, as well as the effects of sexual selection that favours longer tails. The extra enlargement of the tail promoted by sexual selection (i.e. beyond the natural selection optimum) could be achieved by increasing investment in ornaments, and by modifying feather structure to produce longer feathers of lower density. These two separate processes accounting for the production of longer and more costly tail feathers and less dense feathers, respectively, are consistent with the hypothesis that both Zahavian and Fisherian mechanisms may be involved in the evolution of the long tails of male barn swallows. We hypothesize that the strength of sexual selection increases with latitude because of the need for rapid mating as a result of the short duration of the breeding season at high latitudes. © 2012 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2012, 105 , 925–936.
Keywords:aerodynamics  Fisherian process  flight  handicap  migration  sexual selection
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