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Are long penis bones an adaption to high latitude snowy environments?
Authors:Steven H. Ferguson, Serge Lariviè  re
Abstract:Animals adapted to high latitude environments typically live at relatively low densities and require large areas to acquire the requisites for successful reproduction. Also, the unpredictable distribution of energy across time and space, such as environmental seasonality, constrains the timing of mating and parturition and imposes limitations to reproductive strategies. For example, limited mobility due to snow accumulation may reduce mate encounters, and this selective pressure may have resulted in morphological adaptations to assess mate quality during serial encounters. We tested whether mammalian carnivores living in high latitude environments displayed greater use of copulatory competition via length of the penis bone or baculum, and whether females in such settings enhance competition among males via multi-male matings. We then examined how baculum length may correlate with other reproductive adaptations in high latitude environments such as delayed implantation and induced ovulation. Statistical methods that account for phylogeny revealed that longer bacula occur in carnivores living in high latitude environments with greater snow accumulation, and that larger bacula is also associated with delayed implantation and multi-male mating systems. In contrast, the smallest bacula were observed in polygynous species. Our results provide an example of the effects of ecology on the evolution of a secondary sexual character due to sexual selection. Selection pressures imposed by seasonality of resources and environmental conditions affecting locomotion may have led to sexual selection via mating systems for females, and counter morphological adaptations of long penis bones in males.
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