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Sexual Selection I A broad overview

Sexual Selection I

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Sexual Selection I. A broad overview. Charles Darwin with his son William Erasmus in 1842. Emma Darwin in 1840. A section of Darwin’s “notes on marriage”, 1838. Lecture Outline. Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection Difficulties with Natural Selection Definition and idea Humans - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Sexual Selection I

Sexual Selection I

A broad overview

Page 2: Sexual Selection I

Charles Darwin with his son William Erasmus in 1842

Page 3: Sexual Selection I

Emma Darwin in 1840

Page 4: Sexual Selection I

A section of Darwin’s “notes on marriage”, 1838.

Page 5: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study – Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 6: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study– Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 7: Sexual Selection I

Examples of problematic phenomena for the theory of Natural Selection

• Peacocks’ tails

• Blackbird song

• Antlers in deer

• Sexual dimorphism in many species

• Mating display of Great Crested Grebe

Page 8: Sexual Selection I

Examples of problematic phenomena for the theory of Natural Selection

• Peacocks’ tails (technically trains)

• Blackbird song

• Antlers in deer

• Sexual dimorphism in many species

• Mating display of Great Crested Grebe

Page 9: Sexual Selection I
Page 10: Sexual Selection I
Page 11: Sexual Selection I
Page 12: Sexual Selection I
Page 13: Sexual Selection I
Page 14: Sexual Selection I
Page 15: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study– Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 16: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study– Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 17: Sexual Selection I

Darwin (1871, p256):

“We are, however, here concerned only with that kind of selection, which I have called sexual selection. This depends on the advantage which certain individuals have over other individuals of the same sex and species, in exclusive relation to reproduction.”

Page 18: Sexual Selection I

‘In relation to reproduction...’

• Being more noticed by, more attractive to, or more persuasive towards the opposite sex, and so gaining a mating advantage– Inter-sexual selection, ‘female’ choice

• Out-competing other members of the same sex in contests whose outcome determines mating success– Intra-sexual selection, ‘male’ competition

Page 19: Sexual Selection I

Darwin’s criteria

• Age: juvenile vs adult

• Sex: male vs female

• Season: breeding season vs year-round

• Use: specially displayed during mating?

Page 20: Sexual Selection I

Why does advantage in reproduction lead to exaggeration?

• ‘Disproportionate gains’– chooser makes an all or nothing choice

however small the difference is– all choosers may make the same choice

• Our similarity to targets of propaganda– any preference rule can be exploited– sensory systems have limitations

Page 21: Sexual Selection I

Natural Selection vs Sexual Selection

Page 22: Sexual Selection I

Natural Selection vs Sexual Selection

• Utilitarian, functional • Showy, elaborate

Page 23: Sexual Selection I

Natural Selection vs Sexual Selection

• Utilitarian, functional• Solves a problem

• Showy, elaborate• Impresses an audience

Page 24: Sexual Selection I

Natural Selection vs Sexual Selection

• Utilitarian, functional• Solves a problem• Sensible

• Showy, elaborate• Impresses an audience• Whimsical

Page 25: Sexual Selection I

Natural Selection vs Sexual Selection

• Utilitarian, functional• Solves a problem• Sensible• Economical

• Showy, elaborate• Impresses an audience• Whimsical• Wasteful

Page 26: Sexual Selection I

Natural Selection vs Sexual Selection

• Utilitarian, functional• Solves a problem• Sensible• Economical• Fixed

• Showy, elaborate• Impresses an audience• Whimsical• Wasteful• Changeable

Page 27: Sexual Selection I

Natural Selection vs Sexual Selection

• Utilitarian, functional• Solves a problem• Sensible• Economical• Fixed• Constructive

• Showy, elaborate• Impresses an audience• Whimsical• Wasteful• Changeable• Destructive

Page 28: Sexual Selection I

Natural Selection vs Sexual Selection

• Utilitarian, functional• Solves a problem• Sensible• Economical• Fixed• Constructive• Dull

• Showy, elaborate• Impresses an audience• Whimsical• Wasteful• Changeable• Destructive• Exciting

Page 29: Sexual Selection I

Darwin (1871, p256):

“We are, however, here concerned only with that kind of selection, which I have called sexual selection. This depends on the advantage which certain individuals have over other individuals of the same sex and species, in exclusive relation to reproduction.”

Page 30: Sexual Selection I

Human traits possibly related to sexual selection

• Racial differences– skin colour– hair colour and texture

• Gender differences– physical– psychological

• Analogy to fashion in clothes and personal styles

Page 31: Sexual Selection I
Page 32: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study – Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 33: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study– Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 34: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study– Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 35: Sexual Selection I

Kinds of modern work (with one example)

• Field empirical– Møller on barn swallows

• Experimental– Gerhardt on tree frogs

• Comparative method– Eberhard on reproductive anatomy

• Concepts / Mathematical modelling– Lande on runaway processes

Page 36: Sexual Selection I

Modern topics

• Fireflies

• Bird coloration

• Anatomy of reproductive organs

• Sperm competition

• Pollen competition

• Disease resistance

Page 37: Sexual Selection I

Modern topics

• Fireflies

• Bird coloration

• Anatomy of reproductive organs

• Sperm competition

• Pollen competition

• Disease resistance

• … and more, discussed by Marian Dawkins later in the course

Page 38: Sexual Selection I

Modern topics

• Fireflies

• Bird coloration

• Anatomy of reproductive organs

• Sperm competition

• Pollen competition

• Disease resistance

• … and more, discussed by Marian Dawkins later in the course

Page 39: Sexual Selection I

Eberhard (1985)

Page 40: Sexual Selection I

Population level effects...

• include polygamy, polyandry, leks and ruts

• are discussed further later in the course

Page 41: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study– Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 42: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study– Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 43: Sexual Selection I

Modern study of sexual selection

• focusses mainly on preferences,

• treats preferences as adaptive,

• looks for a selective advantage to preference,

• and there are several possibilities.

Page 44: Sexual Selection I

Females might choose

• non-adaptively: because of sensory bias, species recognition.

• adaptively directly: for reasons of fertilisation ability, fecundity, nutrition, parental ability, territory quality, avoiding venereal disease, social status of offspring

• adaptively through good genes: because of inherited attractiveness of sons, or heritable disease resistance, or more generally heritable ‘quality’.

Page 45: Sexual Selection I

Some formal ideas

• Fisher’s runaway model

• Lande’s model

• Measuring Sexual Selection: Lande/Wade/Arnold

• Hamilton/Zuk

• Handicaps & Signalling

Page 46: Sexual Selection I

Andersson (1994)

Page 47: Sexual Selection I

Literature

• C. Darwin (1871) The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex. Republished in 1981 by Princeton University Press.

• Extracts in M.Ridley (1987) The Essential Darwin. Unwin Hyman.

• M. Andersson (1994) Sexual Selection. Princeton University Press.

Page 48: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study– Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 49: Sexual Selection I

Lecture Outline

• Darwin and his addition to Natural Selection– Difficulties with Natural Selection– Definition and idea– Humans

• Modern Study of Sexual Selection– Types of study– Focus on advantages to mate choice

Page 50: Sexual Selection I

In summary,

• Darwin invented sexual selection to accommodate certain kinds of facts within his scheme, partly as a defence against non-biological theories

• He established there was female choice but said little about why

• We now assume selection is at work, and want to know why there is choice