6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1268e11

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Operational sex ratio and resource defence as predictors of the mating system in European bitterling

Suzanne C. MillsJohn D. Reynolds

subject

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationZoologyAquatic ScienceBiologyMating systembiology.organism_classificationEuropean bitterlingSexual selectionOperational sex ratioMatingeducationScramble competitionSperm competitionreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics

description

Operational sex ratio (OSR), the ratio of sexually active males to fertilizable females in a population, plays a central role in the theory of mating systems by predicting that the intensity of male–male competition and the degree of sexual selection increases as the OSR becomes increasingly male biased. At high values of OSR, however, resource defence theory predicts the breakdown of territoriality and a shift towards scramble competition with a decrease in sexual selection. The direction that correlations between OSR and resource competition and variance in mating success will take depends on the biology of the species of interest. We investigated the effects of male population density and male-biased operational sex ratio on male mating tactics shown by a freshwater fish, the European bitterling, Rhodeus sericeus. This species spawns inside living unioneid mussels. Large males defended territories, were aggressive towards conspecifics under equal sex ratios and monopolized pair spawnings with females. The mating tactic, however, changed at high male density where large males ceased to be territorial and instead competed with groups of smaller males to release sperm when females spawned. This change in male behaviour from pair to group spawning has two ramifications for sexual selection. The intensity of sexual selection and variance in male mating success decrease, and the form of sexual competition changes from resource- to sperm competition. Thus, the use of alternative mating tactics renders the OSR unable to predict the direction of resource competition and variance in male mating success at high densities.

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.2003.216ab.x