Abstract

Fights among females are frequent, although less attention has been placed on them than on male fights. They arise when females compete for food, oviposition, mates, brooding sites, or access to resources which increase offspring survival. It has been shown that the outcome of female fights may be less predictable by asymmetries in resource holding power, than in male fights. Male roller beetles fight over food resources, food balls, needed for mating and nesting, and it has been show in some species that asymmetries in reproductive experience and resource holding power in terms of size predict fight outcome, including ties in which contenders cut and split the food ball. In this study, we tested the influence of asymmetries in reproductive status (experience) and body size on female fight outcome in the carrion roller beetle Canthon cyanellus cyanellus. As predicted, and as previously found for males of the same species, female reproductive status of both contenders and relative size predict fight outcome. Larger and reproductively experienced contenders have a higher probability of winning. Furthermore, ties are more likely in fights involving opposing asymmetries (vgr. Large reproductively naïve owner versus small reproductively experienced intruder). Also as predicted, food ball splitting is more likely to be started by the predicted loser. This mode of resource sharing may be the result of a fighting strategy in which the costs of continuing to fight are greater than the benefits of not splitting, if a fraction of the disputed resource is more than the minimum needed for the present reproductive needs, and reduces costs associated to a longer fight.

Highlights

  • Social selection is a general concept that includes social competition for resources other than mates, and sexual selection is a special case of social selection [1]

  • The minimum model of logistic regression showed that the predictors which significantly influenced the outcome of intrasexual fights between females were the interaction between owner reproductive status and body size asymmetry, as well as the reproductive status of both contenders and the body size asymmetry (Table 2)

  • Our results show that food ball female owners of C.c. cyanellus had a greater probability of winning fights against intruders who tried to steal the resource

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Summary

Introduction

Social selection is a general concept that includes social competition for resources other than mates, and sexual selection is a special case of social selection [1]. Social selection implies differential success in social competition whatever the resources at stake, conducing to differential reproductive success, which implies differential gene replication [1]. Competition for non-sexual resources may involve the same sort of traits produced by sexual. Factors affecting contest outcome of female roller beetles

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