AI Article Synopsis

  • Sexual selection drives the development of eye-catching animal traits that indicate the individual's fitness, but there's limited evidence of how these traits correlate with actual fitness measures like lifespan and reproduction.
  • In an experiment with male red-legged partridges, researchers found that the brightness of carotenoid-based ornaments, like bill and eye ring color, predicted both longevity and reproductive success.
  • However, manipulating testosterone levels affected these traits, making them unreliable indicators of fitness, highlighting the importance of stable steroid metabolism in the evolution of these sexual signals.

Article Abstract

Sexual selection promotes the evolution of conspicuous animal ornaments. To evolve as signals, these traits must reliably express the "quality" of the bearer, an indicator of individual fitness. Direct estimates of individual fitness may include the contribution of longevity and fecundity. However, evidence of a correlation between the level of signal expression and these two fitness components are scarce, at least among vertebrates. Relative fitness is difficult to assess in the wild as age at death and extra-pair paternity rates are often unknown. Here, in captive male red-legged partridges, we show that carotenoid-based ornament expression, i.e., redness of the bill and eye rings, at the beginning of reproductive life predicts both longevity (1-7 years) and lifetime breeding output (offspring number and hatching success). The recently proposed link between the individual capacity to produce red (keto) carotenoid pigments and the efficiency of cell respiration could, ultimately, explain the correlation with lifespan and, indirectly, fecundity. Nonetheless, in males of avian species, carotenoid-based coloration in bare parts is also partially controlled by testosterone. We also manipulated androgen levels throughout life by treating males with testosterone or antiandrogen compounds. Treatments caused correlations between signal levels and both fitness components to disappear, thus making the signals unreliable. This suggests that the evolution of carotenoid-based sexual signals requires a tightly-controlled steroid metabolism.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6707625PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0221436PLOS

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

carotenoid-based coloration
8
predicts longevity
8
individual fitness
8
fitness components
8
fitness
5
carotenoid-based
4
coloration predicts
4
longevity lifetime
4
lifetime fecundity
4
fecundity male
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!