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No Evidence of Male-biased Sexual Selection in a Snake with Conventional Darwinian Sex Roles

Overview
Journal R Soc Open Sci
Specialty Science
Date 2020 Nov 18
PMID 33204479
Citations 3
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Abstract

Decades of research on sexual selection have demonstrated that 'conventional' Darwinian sex roles are common in species with anisogamous gametes, with those species often exhibiting male-biased sexual selection. Yet, mating system characteristics such as long-term sperm storage and polyandry have the capacity to disrupt this pattern. Here, these ideas were explored by quantifying sexual selection metrics for the western diamond-backed rattlesnake (). A significant standardized sexual selection gradient was not found for males ( = 0.588, = 0.199) or females ( = 0.151, = 0.664), and opportunities for sexual selection ( ) and selection () did not differ between males ( = 0.069, = 0.360) and females ( = 0.284, = 0.424; both > 0.05). Furthermore, the sexes did not differ in the maximum intensity of precopulatory sexual selection (males: = 0.155, females: = 0.080; > 0.05). Finally, there was no evidence that male snout-vent length, a trait associated with mating advantage, is a target of sexual selection ( > 0.05). These results suggest a lack of male-biased sexual selection in this population. Mating system characteristics that could erode male-biased sexual selection, despite the presence of conventional Darwinian sex roles, are discussed.

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