Experimental evolution under varying sex ratio and behavioral plasticity in response to perceived competitive environment independently affect calling effort in male crickets

Author:

McKermitt Jack T1,Foquet Bert1ORCID,Kuna Will1,Hunt John2ORCID,Sadd Ben M1ORCID,Sakaluk Scott K1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Behavior, Ecology, Evolution and Conservation Section, Illinois State University , Normal, IL , United States

2. School of Science, Western Sydney University , Penrith, NSW , Australia

Abstract

Abstract The operational sex ratio (OSR) is a key component influencing the magnitude of sexual selection driving the evolution of male sexual traits, but males often also retain the ability to plastically modulate trait expression depending on the current environment. Here we employed an experimental evolution approach to determine whether the OSR affects the evolution of male calling effort in decorated crickets, a costly sexual trait, and whether plasticity in calling effort is altered by the OSR under which males have evolved. Calling effort of males from 2 selection regimes maintained at different OSRs over 18–20 generations (male vs. female biased) was recorded at 2 different levels of perceived competition, in the absence of rivals or in the presence of an experimentally muted competitor. The effect of the OSR on the evolution of male calling effort was modest, and in the opposite direction predicted by theory. Instead, the immediate competitive environment strongly influenced male calling effort as males called more in the presence of a rival, revealing considerable plasticity in this trait. This increased calling effort came at a cost, however, as males confined with a muted rival experienced significantly higher mortality.

Funder

Beta Lambda Chapter of the Phi Sigma Biological Honor Society

Orthopterists' Society

E. L. Mockford and C. F. Thompson Summer Research Fellowship

Illinois State University

Australian Research Council

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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