Darwinian sex roles confirmed across the animal kingdom.

Sci Adv

Animal Evolutionary Ecology Group, Institute for Evolution and Ecology, University of Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 28, 72076 Tübingen, Germany.

Published: February 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists have been trying to understand the reasons behind the differences in behavior and physical traits between males and females since Darwin introduced sexual selection theory.
  • The Darwin-Bateman paradigm suggests that male traits evolve more due to stronger sexual selection driven by anisogamy, leading to traditional roles where females provide more parental care and males exhibit more pronounced physical differences.
  • This study provides solid evidence supporting Darwin's ideas, showing that sexual selection is indeed stronger in males and closely linked to their roles in parenting and physical attributes, countering recent criticisms of the original sexual selection theory.

Article Abstract

Since Darwin's conception of sexual selection theory, scientists have struggled to identify the evolutionary forces underlying the pervasive differences between male and female behavior, morphology, and physiology. The Darwin-Bateman paradigm predicts that anisogamy imposes stronger sexual selection on males, which, in turn, drives the evolution of conventional sex roles in terms of female-biased parental care and male-biased sexual dimorphism. Although this paradigm forms the cornerstone of modern sexual selection theory, it still remains untested across the animal tree of life. This lack of evidence has promoted the rise of alternative hypotheses arguing that sex differences are entirely driven by environmental factors or chance. We demonstrate that, across the animal kingdom, sexual selection, as captured by standard Bateman metrics, is indeed stronger in males than in females and that it is evolutionarily tied to sex biases in parental care and sexual dimorphism. Our findings provide the first comprehensive evidence that Darwin's concept of conventional sex roles is accurate and refute recent criticism of sexual selection theory.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4758741PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1500983DOI Listing

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