Different sexual traits show covariation among genotypes: implications for sexual selection
ALISON F. COOPERMAN, MICHAL POLAK, CHRISTOPHER S. EVANS,
and PHILLIP W. TAYLOR
Behavioral
Ecology, 2007, 18: 311-317
An unresolved question in sexual selection research is whether different
secondary sexual traits are developmentally independent or instead whether
their degree of expression is a manifestation of a general resource pool
(i.e., condition) within the organism. If degree of expression of different
sexual traits reflects differential ability to accumulate condition, then
covariation should exist 10 across genotypes in the expression of these traits,
even if they are very different in kind. Here we present evidence for predicted
covariation between morphological (sex comb size) and behavioral (courtship
song) sexual traits among genetic lines of Drosophila bipectinata Duda
extracted from a natural population. There is evidence that both these traits
in Drosophila are condition dependent and subject to sexual selection. We
detected significant body size–independent differences in comb size
among 32 lines. Replicate lines exhibiting relatively high and low values
of comb size were then subjected to analyses of courtship 15 song. High sex
comb lines exhibited shorter mean burst period and shorter mean burst duration
than low sex comb lines. These song differences occurred only during the
distant pursuit phase of male courtship and existed despite factoring out
individual variations in sex comb size, the trait on the basis of which test
lines were originally chosen. The results verify the prediction of an association
between condition-dependent secondary sexual traits across genotypes and,
therefore, support the existence of an overall genetic quality related to
condition acquisition.
Key words: condition,
courtship song, Drosophila bipectinata, genetic quality, secondary sexual
traits, sex comb.