Royal Society Open Science (Oct 2020)

No evidence of male-biased sexual selection in a snake with conventional Darwinian sex roles

  • Brenna A. Levine,
  • Gordon W. Schuett,
  • Rulon W. Clark,
  • Roger A. Repp,
  • Hans-Werner Herrmann,
  • Warren Booth

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201261
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 10

Abstract

Read online

Decades of research on sexual selection have demonstrated that ‘conventional’ Darwinian sex roles are common in species with anisogamous gametes, with those species often exhibiting male-biased sexual selection. Yet, mating system characteristics such as long-term sperm storage and polyandry have the capacity to disrupt this pattern. Here, these ideas were explored by quantifying sexual selection metrics for the western diamond-backed rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox). A significant standardized sexual selection gradient was not found for males (βSS = 0.588, p = 0.199) or females (βSS = 0.151, p = 0.664), and opportunities for sexual selection (Is) and selection (I) did not differ between males (Is = 0.069, I = 0.360) and females (Is = 0.284, I = 0.424; both p > 0.05). Furthermore, the sexes did not differ in the maximum intensity of precopulatory sexual selection (males: s′max = 0.155, females: s′max = 0.080; p > 0.05). Finally, there was no evidence that male snout–vent length, a trait associated with mating advantage, is a target of sexual selection (p > 0.05). These results suggest a lack of male-biased sexual selection in this population. Mating system characteristics that could erode male-biased sexual selection, despite the presence of conventional Darwinian sex roles, are discussed.

Keywords