THE COST OF SECONDARY SEXUAL CHARACTERS AND THE EVOLUTION OF COST-REDUCING TRAITS

Authors
Citation
Ap. Moller, THE COST OF SECONDARY SEXUAL CHARACTERS AND THE EVOLUTION OF COST-REDUCING TRAITS, Ibis, 138(1), 1996, pp. 112-119
Citations number
42
Categorie Soggetti
Ornithology
Journal title
IbisACNP
ISSN journal
00191019
Volume
138
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
112 - 119
Database
ISI
SICI code
0019-1019(1996)138:1<112:TCOSSC>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Secondary sexual traits are characterized by their exaggerated express ion relative to homologous nonsexual characters in other species. All models of sexual selection assume that sex traits are costly to produc e and maintain, and individuals with reduced costs of production and m aintenance of secondary sexual characters would be at a selective adva ntage. A number of morphological, physiological and behavioural traits may have evolved as a result of their cost-reducing properties: (1) b ody size, which does not change throughout life, that allows certain i ndividuals to develop exaggerated sex traits, (2) cost-reducing traits , such as muscle size, that improve with practice and (3) actual cost- reducing traits, such as wing size in birds with song flight, which ar e produced in advance of or simultaneously with the sex trait. Cost-re ducing traits may coevolve with secondary sexual characters and allow more extreme sexual signalling than would otherwise have been possible in their absence or in reduced versions.