Why female birds of prey are larger than males

Author:

Schoenjahn Jonny1ORCID,Pavey Chris R2,Walter Gimme H1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

2. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Winnellie, NT, Australia

Abstract

Abstract The causes of the reversed sexual size dimorphism (RSD; females larger than males) in birds of prey are subject to a centuries-old, passionate debate. A crucial difficulty is to distinguish whether the postulated benefits derive from the proposed causal process(es) or are incidental. After reviewing the existing literature, we present a methodology that overcomes this difficulty and renders unnecessary any speculative a priori distinctions between evolved function and incidental effects. We can thus justify the following novel version of the well-known nest defence hypothesis as the most likely to explain the phenomenon in all birds of prey that show RSD: if the female predominates in actively defending the eggs and young against predators, then she is the heavier sex, and her relatively greater body mass is adaptive. That is, heavier females are favoured (independently of males) by natural selection. The attractiveness of this hypothesis is that it has the potential to explain the phenomenon in all raptors exhibiting RSD, can deal with the exceptional cases in this group, explains the direction of the dimorphism, focuses on a key factor in the reproductive success of most raptors, is parsimonious, i.e. does not require supporting hypotheses, and is supported by a substantial body of evidence.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference102 articles.

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3. Evolution of reversed sexual size dimorphism and role partitioning among predatory birds, with a size scaling of flight performance;Andersson;Biological Journal of the Linnean Society,1981

4. The evolution of sexual size dimorphism in the house finch. V. Maternal effects;Badyaev;Evolution,2003

5. Behavior and ecology of the American kestrel (Falco sparverius L.) in the Sierra Nevada of California;Balgooyen;University of California Publications in Zoology,1976

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