Sexual selection moderates heat stress response in males and females.

Funct Ecol

Centre d'Écologie Fonctionnelle et Évolutive, CNRS University of Montpellier, EPHE, IRD Montpellier Cedex 05 France.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Climate change leads to organisms being displaced from their ideal temperature ranges, particularly stressing male reproduction, but evidence on how this affects males versus females is mixed.
  • The study focused on red flour beetles and found that polygamous conditions increased heat stress negative effects in males while benefiting females, indicating sexual selection plays a role in how organisms respond to thermal stress.
  • These findings suggest that sexual selection can change the typical differences in thermal sensitivity between sexes, potentially aiding male adaptation to global warming if both sexual and natural selection favor similar genetic traits under stress.

Article Abstract

A widespread effect of climate change is the displacement of organisms from their thermal optima. The associated thermal stress imposed by climate change has been argued to have a particularly strong impact on male reproduction but evidence for this postulated sex-specific stress response is equivocal.One important factor that may explain intra- and interspecific variation in stress responses is sexual selection, which is predicted to magnify negative effects of stress. Nevertheless, empirical studies exploring the interplay of sexual selection and heat stress are still scarce.We tested experimentally for an interaction between sexual selection and thermal stress in the red flour beetle by contrasting heat responses in male and female reproductive success between enforced monogamy and polygamy.We found that polygamy magnifies detrimental effects of heat stress in males but relaxes the observed negative effects in females. Our results suggest that sexual selection can reverse sex differences in thermal sensitivity, and may therefore alter sex-specific selection on alleles associated with heat tolerance.Assuming that sexual selection and natural selection are aligned to favour the same genetic variants under environmental stress, our findings support the idea that sexual selection on males may promote the adaptation to current global warming. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10092254PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.14204DOI Listing

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