Within any given clade, male size and female size typically covary, but male size often varies more than female size. This generates a pattern of allometry for sexual size dimorphism (SSD) known as Rensch's rule. I use allometry for SSD among populations of the water strider Aquarius remigis (Hemiptera, Gerridae) to test the hypothesis that Rensch's rule evolves in response to sexual selection on male secondary sexual traits and an alternative hypothesis that it is caused by greater phenotypic plasticity of body size in males. Comparisons of three populations reared under two temperature regimes are combined with an analysis of allometry for genital and somatic components of body size among 25 field populations. Contrary to the sexual-selection hypothesis, genital length, the target of sexual selection, shows the lowest allometric slope of all the assayed traits. Instead, the results support a novel interpretation of the differential-plasticity hypothesis: that the traits most closely associated with reproductive fitness (abdomen length in females and genital length in males) are "adaptively canalized." While this hypothesis is unlikely to explain Rensch's rule among species or higher clades, it may explain widespread patterns of intraspecific variation in SSD recently documented for many insect species.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/444600 | DOI Listing |
Biology (Basel)
December 2024
Nature Research Centre, Akademijos 2, 08412 Vilnius, Lithuania.
We assessed the sexual size dimorphism (SSD), analyzing standard morphometric traits in juveniles, subadults, and adults, of 14 species of voles, mice, and shrews in Lithuania on the basis of long-term surveys, updating information published 35 years ago and in the context of data from other countries. ANOVA, -tests, and a 5% threshold were used in the analyses. Male-biased SSD was observed in and , which was subject to Rensch's rule, and in three other meadow vole species, with the strongest expression in adult individuals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Evol Biol
December 2024
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Allometry, the relationship between body size and the size of other body parts, explains a significant portion of morphological variation across biological levels, at the individual level, within and between species. We used external morphology measurements of 6 Triturus (sub)species, focussing on the T. marmoratus species group, to explore allometric parameters within and between taxa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Evol Biol
November 2024
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, M5S 3B2 ON, Canada.
Rensch's Rule describes a pattern of interspecific allometry in which sexual size dimorphism (SSD) increases with size among closely related species (i.e., among a group of related species, the largest ones tend to show more male-biased SSD).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Lett
September 2024
Department of Biological and Environmental Science, University of Jyväskylä, PO Box 35, Jyväskylä FI-40014, Finland.
Sexual dimorphism is widespread among animals, with diverse patterns and proposed explanations observed across the Tree of Life. Here we present the first formal analysis of the patterns of sexual dimorphism in body size and cephalic sensory appendages across 40 species (from 10 genera) of armoured tardigrades (Echiniscidae). Phylogenetic signal was found for body size traits and the cephalic papilla relative size, indicating that the association between these traits between the sexes has high evolutionary persistence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegr Org Biol
July 2024
Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA.
Systematic trends in body size variation exist in a multitude of vertebrate radiations, however their underlying ecological and evolutionary causes remain poorly understood. Rensch's rule describes one such trend-in which the scaling of sexual size dimorphism (SSD) depends on which sex is larger. Where SSD is male-biased, SSD should scale hyperallometrically, as opposed to hypoallometrically where SSD is female-biased.
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