Effects of breeding site density on competition and sexual selection in the European lobster

The availability of breeding sites has been predicted to affect the intensity of sexual selection, including mate competition, mate choice and ultimately, variation in mating success. We tested the hypothesis that reduced density of shelters would cause an increase in the intensity of sexual selecti...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Valerie J. Debuse, B Julian T. Addison, John D. Reynoldsb
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.582.1067
http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/content/14/3/396.full.pdf
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Summary:The availability of breeding sites has been predicted to affect the intensity of sexual selection, including mate competition, mate choice and ultimately, variation in mating success. We tested the hypothesis that reduced density of shelters would cause an increase in the intensity of sexual selection in European lobsters, Homarus gammarus. However, we found little support for our predictions. For example, within-sex competition by males and by females was not more intense when shelters were scarce. Indeed, females attempted to evict one another from shelters significantly more often when shelters were common. When shelters were abundant, shelter-holding males had greater mating success than males without shelters, yet females did not show more interest towards these males during courtship encounters. Mate attraction was more strongly related to large male body size when shelters were scarce. Overall, the results suggest that reduced shelter density does not lead to more overt within-sex aggression in this species. Instead, we suggest that impacts of breeding resource availability on sexual selection may depend on the range over which resources are measured, with extreme scarcity of shelters rendering overt competition uneconomical. Furthermore, females may become more selective of male traits such as large size, which enhance male control of breeding sites and hence protection of females. Key words: Crustacea, mate choice, mating system, reproduction, resource defense. [Behav Ecol 14:396–402 (2003)] Breeding systems are governed by the ability of one sex togain access to members of the other sex either by direct means, such as courtship, coercion, and pre- and post-copulatory competition, or by controlling resources that are vital to reproduction (Emlen and Oring, 1977; Reynolds, 1996). The availability of individuals of each sex that are ready to mate will be determined mainly by potential rates of reproduction and biases in the adult sex ratio (Clutton-Brock