Sexual behaviour and evolution of sexual dimorphism in body size in Jaera (Isopoda Asellota) |
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Authors: | MICHEL VEUILLE |
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Affiliation: | Laboratoire de Biologie et Génétique Evolutives, C.N.R.S., 91190, Gif-sur-Yvette, France |
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Abstract: | Individuals of the genus Jaera do not mate at random. In the species from the Mediterranean group, J. italica and. J. nordmanni, large males and medium sized females are at an advantage and their sizes are positively assorted. These effects are attributable to sexual competition between males. In the Ponlo-caspian species J. istri, no advantage of large males exists, but sexual selection could be the cause for a long passive phase prior to copulation and for normalizing selection upon female size at pairing. In the Atlantic species, J. albifrons, no selection can be ascertained. Differential mating success in males appears as one of the causes of the evolution of sexual dimorphism in body size, which makes males larger, of equal size, or smaller than females according to the species. The reason for this reversal in dimorphism seems to differ in the two sexes. Sexual selection provides an explanation for the evolution of male size, while the interspecific changes in female length are more likely due to ecological factors. |
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Keywords: | sexual competition sexual dimorphism body size Crustacea |
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