Article

The role of functional constraints in nonrandom mating patterns for a dance fly with female ornaments

Details

Citation

Murray RL, Gwynne DT & Bussiere LF (2019) The role of functional constraints in nonrandom mating patterns for a dance fly with female ornaments. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 32 (9), pp. 984-993. https://doi.org/10.1111/jeb.13500

Abstract
Most hypotheses to explain non‐random mating patterns invoke mate choice, particularly in species that display elaborate ornaments. However, conflicting selection pressures on traits can result in functional constraints that can also cause non‐random mating patterns. We tested for functional load‐lifting constraints during aerial copulation in Rhamphomyia longicauda, a species of dance fly that displays multiple extravagant female‐specific ornaments that are unusual among sexual traits because they are under stabilizing selection. R. longicauda males provide females with a nuptial gift before engaging in aerial mating, and the male bears the entire weight of the female and nuptial gift for the duration of copulation. In theory, a male's ability to carry females and nuptial gifts could constrain pairing opportunities for the heaviest females, as reported for non‐ornamented dance flies. In concert with directional preferences for large females with mature eggs, such a load‐lifting constraint could produce the stabilizing selection on female size previously observed in this species. We therefore tested whether wild‐caught male R. longicauda collected during copulation were experiencing load‐lift limitations by comparing the mass carried by males during copulation with the male's wing loading traits. We also performed permutation tests to determine whether the loads carried by males during copulation were lighter than expected. We found that heavier males are more often found mating with heavier females suggesting that while R. longicauda males do not experience a load‐lift constraint, there is a strong relationship of assortative mating by mass. We suggest that active male mate choice for intermediately adorned females is more likely to be causing the non‐random mating patterns observed in R. longicauda.

Keywords
assortative mating; dance flies; female ornaments; male mate choice; mating constraint; Rhamphomyia longicauda; sexual selection

Journal
Journal of Evolutionary Biology: Volume 32, Issue 9

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/2019
Publication date online28/06/2019
Date accepted by journal14/06/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/29842
ISSN1010-061X
eISSN1420-9101

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