Sexual conflicts along gradients of density and predation risk: Insights from an egg-trading fish

Mary K. Hart, Kausalya Shenoy, Philip H. Crowley

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

In principle, the intensity of sexual conflict is best measured as a loss of fitness associated with the expression of conflict-related traits. But because the relevant traits may be difficult to manipulate and fitness difficult to assess, proxy variables linked to conflict intensity may provide important tools for empirical measurement. Here we identify two common types of sexual conflict-one within mating pairs over the less expensive male role, and one between mating pairs and intruders seeking to obtain fertilizations-and consider how they vary in intensity along gradients of population density and predation risk. To do this, we develop and analyze a model of mating dynamics in the chalk bass, an egg-trading simultaneous hermaphrodite that lives on Caribbean coral reefs. In this species, within-pair sexual conflict leads each female-role partner to provide in each mating episode only a subset (parcel) of its egg clutch to its mate for fertilization. Pair-intruder sexual conflict (i. e., sperm competition) increases the proportion of the gonad allocated to male function. In the model, more parceling and greater male allocation both resulted in lower fitness at the ESS, our measure of conflict intensity. Male allocation increased along the density gradient but decreased along the predation-risk gradient, reflecting shifts in intrusion frequency. Parcel number sharply increased and then decreased more gradually along a gradient of increasing local density, initially responding to increased availability of alternative mates across low densities and then to diminishing clutch size toward higher densities. Parcel number decreased with predation risk as each mating episode became more dangerous. Conflict intensities were usually greatest at intermediate positions along the two environmental gradients, and each conflict ameliorated the intensity of the other. Overall, parceling and sex allocation may be good though imperfect proxies for intensities of within-pair and pair-intruder sexual conflicts among chalk bass.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1081-1105
Number of pages25
JournalEvolutionary Ecology
Volume25
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2011

Funding

Acknowledgments We thank Eric Fischer, Yoriko Saeki, Craig Sargent, Crowley lab members, Chuck Fox, and Nico Michiels for discussions of these and closely related ideas. We especially appreciate comments and suggestions on the manuscript from Chris Petersen, Bob Warner, Dave Westneat, Gisela García-Ramos, Derik Castillo Guajardo, Lukas Schärer, Cristina Lorenzi, Gabriella Sella, Sara Helms Cahan and three anonymous reviewers. M. K. H. acknowledges UK Graduate School and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institution (STRI), UK Biology Department Gertrude Flora Ribble Fund, UK Association of Emeriti Faculty, the PADI Foundation, Animal Behavior Society, and Sigma Xi for fellowships and research grants. Work cited as unpublished or in preparation is part of the dissertation project of MKH.

FundersFunder number
UK Graduate School and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institution
PADI Foundation
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
Animal Behavior Society
Sigma-Aldrich

    Keywords

    • Egg parceling
    • Evolutionary game theory
    • Mating systems
    • Reciprocity
    • Serranus tortugarum
    • Sex allocation
    • Simultaneous hermaphrodite

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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