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Patterns of fluctuating asymmetry in beetle horns: no evidence for reliable signaling
Authors:Hunt  John; Simmons  Leigh W
Institution:Department of Zoology The University of Western Australia Nedlands, WA 6009, Australia
Abstract:Negative relations between trait size and levels of fluctuatingasymmetry in secondary sexual traits have been claimed to beindicative of honest signaling of male quality. Comparativestudies of beetle horns have been used to illustrate the requirednegative relation between trait size and asymmeiry However,such studies may be confounded by measurement error or samplingbias due to population differences or differences within speciesin the phenotypic expression of hornedness. We examined thepatterns of fluctuating asymmetry within two species of hornedbeetle. We found that, in agreement with theory, horns exhibitgreater asymmetry than naturally selected traits. However, wefound a strong positive relation between horn size and asymmetryin Onthophagus taurs, a species with male dimorphisms, and aflat relation in Bubas bison, a species with continuous variationin horn size. We suggest that these differences may reflectfunctional differences in horns. We conclude that patterns ofasymmetry in horned beetles do not support the notion of honestsignaling.
Keywords:beetle horns  Bubas bison  fluctuating asymmetry  honest signaling  Onthophagus taurus  sexual selection  
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