Rapid decreases in relative testes mass among monogamous birds but not in other vertebrates.

Abstract:

:Larger testes produce more sperm and therefore improve reproductive success in the face of sperm competition. Adaptation to social mating systems with relatively high and low sperm competition are therefore likely to have driven changes in relative testes size in opposing directions. Here, we combine the largest vertebrate testes mass dataset ever collected with phylogenetic approaches for measuring rates of morphological evolution to provide the first quantitative evidence for how relative testes mass has changed over time. We detect explosive radiations of testes mass diversity distributed throughout the vertebrate tree of life: bursts of rapid change have been frequent during vertebrate evolutionary history. In socially monogamous birds, there have been repeated rapid reductions in relative testes mass. We see no such pattern in other monogamous vertebrates; the prevalence of monogamy in birds may have increased opportunities for investment in alternative behaviours and physiologies allowing reduced investment in expensive testes.

journal_name

Ecol Lett

journal_title

Ecology letters

authors

Baker J,Humphries S,Ferguson-Gow H,Meade A,Venditti C

doi

10.1111/ele.13431

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2020-02-01 00:00:00

pages

283-292

issue

2

eissn

1461-023X

issn

1461-0248

journal_volume

23

pub_type

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