Abstract

Secondary sexual traits may convey reliable information about males’ ability to resist pathogens and that females may prefer those traits because their genes for resistance would be passed on to their offspring. In many insect species, large males have high mating success and can canalize more resources to the immune function than smaller males. In other species, males use pheromones to identify and attract conspecific mates, and thus, they might function as an honest indicator of a male's condition. The males of orchid bees do not produce pheromones. They collect and store flower volatiles, which are mixed with the volatile blends from other sources, like fungi, sap and resins. These blends are displayed as perfumes during the courtship. In this study, we explored the relationship between inter‐individual variation in body size and blend composition with the males’ phenoloxidase (PO) content in Euglossa imperialis. PO content is a common measure of insect immune response because melanine, its derived molecule, encapsulates parasites and pathogens. Body size and blend composition were related to bees’ phenolic PO content. The inter‐individual variation in body size and tibial contents could indicate differences among males in their skills to gain access to some compounds. The females may evaluate their potential mates through these compounds because some of them are reliable indicators of the males’ capacity to resist infections and parasites.

Highlights

  • Male secondary sexual traits may convey reliable information about males’ health and condition (Zahavi, 1975)

  • We explored the relationship between inter-­individual variation in body size and blend composition with the males’ phenoloxidase (PO) content in Euglossa imperialis collected in Los Tuxtlas, Veracruz, Mexico

  • We found that body size, the amount of the blend and its composition (PC 1) are positively related to bees’ immune function in Euglosasa imperialis

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Male secondary sexual traits may convey reliable information about males’ health and condition (Zahavi, 1975). Resistance could be screened as a function of immune system, and given that there are evolutionary costs associated with the expression of sexually selected traits (SST; Jacobs & Zuck, 2012), and immune system (Demas, Greives, Chester, & French, 2012), those males showing the more elaborated SST should be healthy (Jacobs & Zuck, 2012) This is explained because costs impose a handicap, and only males in good condition can canalize resources to both traits (Getty, 2002; Sheldon & Verhulst, 1996; Westneat & Birkhead, 1998). We expected a positive relationship between body size and PO content, and a significant relationship between blend composition and PO content

| Sampling procedure
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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