No association between metabolic rate and an exaggerated sexually selected trait
No association between metabolic rate and an exaggerated sexually selected trait
Matsumura, K.; Noda, T.; Sharma, M. D.; Okada, K.; Miyatake, T.; Hosken, D. J.
AbstractExaggerated sexually selected traits are thought to be energetically costly to produce and to maintain. This is especially true of sexually selected weapons, traits that are frequently positively allometric, and therefore likely to be especially energetically costly. However, there have been few studies that directly measure these putative costs. Here we tested for the associations between resting metabolic rate, during development and adulthood, and the size of a weapon used during adult male-male competition in the beetle Gnatocerus cornutus. We found that metabolic rate was not statistically associated with weapon size, but there were effects of genotype and mass during development (pupal size) on weapons. Additionally, age, mass and genotype all affected metabolic rate in various ways. Despite no evidence of energetic costs to weapon development or maintenance, direct predation costs associated with them have been detected previously, and hence enlarged weapons are costly in this system.