AI Article Synopsis

  • - Scarab beetles display a wide variety of "horns" that vary in size, shape, and growth patterns, exhibiting significant differences between males and females as well as among species.
  • - Small male beetles may not grow horns or only develop smaller horns relative to their body size, suggesting different growth mechanisms at play.
  • - Through transcriptome analysis of two beetle species, researchers found genes linked to horn growth that showed signs of positive selection, indicating the influence of sexual selection, along with evidence for relaxed selection related to horned versus horn-less variations.

Article Abstract

Scarab beetles exhibit an astonishing variety of rigid exo-skeletal outgrowths, known as "horns". These traits are often sexually dimorphic and vary dramatically across species in size, shape, location, and allometry with body size. In many species, the horn exhibits disproportionate growth resulting in an exaggerated allometric relationship with body size, as compared to other traits, such as wings, that grow proportionately with body size. Depending on the species, the smallest males either do not produce a horn at all, or they produce a disproportionately small horn for their body size. While the diversity of horn shapes and their behavioural ecology have been reasonably well studied, we know far less about the proximate mechanisms that regulate horn growth. Thus, using 454 pyrosequencing, we generated transcriptome profiles, during horn growth and development, in two different scarab beetle species: the Asian rhinoceros beetle, Trypoxylus dichotomus, and the dung beetle, Onthophagus nigriventris. We obtained over half a million reads for each species that were assembled into over 6,000 and 16,000 contigs respectively. We combined these data with previously published studies to look for signatures of molecular evolution. We found a small subset of genes with horn-biased expression showing evidence for recent positive selection, as is expected with sexual selection on horn size. We also found evidence of relaxed selection present in genes that demonstrated biased expression between horned and horn-less morphs, consistent with the theory of developmental decoupling of phenotypically plastic traits.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3930525PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0088364PLOS

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