AI Article Synopsis

  • Evolutionary theory suggests that individuals optimize costly traits based on their cost-benefit differences, leading to size and sex variations in trait expression.
  • In a study of snapping shrimp, researchers found that larger males and females exhibited different tradeoffs between weapon size and abdominal size, with smaller individuals showing stronger tradeoffs.
  • The findings indicate that for male snapping shrimp, large weapon sizes relate to increased mating success, while for females, weapon size negatively impacts reproductive output, highlighting the evolutionary pressures that shape trait development across sexes.

Article Abstract

Evolutionary theory suggests that individuals should express costly traits at a magnitude that optimizes the trait bearer's cost-benefit difference. Trait expression varies across a species because costs and benefits vary among individuals. For example, if large individuals pay lower costs than small individuals, then larger individuals should reach optimal cost-benefit differences at greater trait magnitudes. Using the cavitation-shooting weapons found in the big claws of male and female snapping shrimp, we test whether size- and sex-dependent expenditures explain scaling and sex differences in weapon size. We found that males and females from three snapping shrimp species (Alpheus heterochaelis, Alpheus angulosus, and Alpheus estuariensis) show patterns consistent with tradeoffs between weapon and abdomen size. For male A. heterochaelis, the species for which we had the greatest statistical power, smaller individuals showed steeper tradeoffs. Our extensive dataset in A. heterochaelis also included data about pairing, breeding season, and egg clutch size. Therefore, we could test for reproductive tradeoffs and benefits in this species. Female A. heterochaelis exhibited tradeoffs between weapon size and egg count, average egg volume, and total egg mass volume. For average egg volume, smaller females exhibited steeper tradeoffs. Furthermore, in males but not females, large weapons were positively correlated with the probability of being paired and the relative size of their pair mates. In conclusion, we identified size-dependent tradeoffs that could underlie reliable scaling of costly traits. Furthermore, weapons are especially beneficial to males and burdensome to females, which could explain why males have larger weapons than females.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10234628PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.84589DOI Listing

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