Abstract

Exaggerated secondary sexual characteristics are apparently costly and seem to defy natural selection. This conundrum promoted the theory of sexual selection. Accordingly, exaggerated secondary sexual characteristics might be ornaments on which female choice is based and/or armaments used during male–male competition. Males of many cichlid fish species, including the adaptive radiation of Nicaraguan Midas cichlids, develop a highly exaggerated nuchal hump, which is thought to be a sexually selected trait. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a series of behavioral assays in F2 hybrids obtained from crossing a species with a relatively small hump and one with an exaggerated hump. Mate‐choice experiments showed a clear female preference for males with large humps. In an open‐choice experiment with limited territories, couples including large humped males were more successful in acquiring these territories. Therefore, nuchal humps appear to serve dual functions as an ornament for attracting mates and as an armament for direct contest with rivals. Although being beneficial in terms of sexual selection, this trait also imposes fitness costs on males possessing disproportionally large nuchal humps since they exhibit decreased endurance and increased energetic costs when swimming. We conclude that these costs illustrate trade‐offs associated with large hump size between sexual and natural selection, which causes the latter to limit further exaggeration of this spectacular male trait.

Highlights

  • The evolution of exaggerated secondary sexual characteristics has interested scientists since Charles Darwin (Andersson, 1994; Berglund et al, 1996; Darwin, 1871; Fisher, 1930; Zahavi, 1975)

  • We explored the role of nuchal humps in male F2 hybrid Midas cichlids in mating success as ornaments and/or armaments, through a combination of limited-­choice and open-­choice experiments, as well as the potential associated swimming costs of nuchal humps

  • We investigated the function of nuchal humps in second-­generation laboratory-­reared (F2) Midas cichlid individuals obtained from one breeding pair of a cross between a species with relatively small humps, Amphilophus labiatus, and a species with exaggerated humps, Amphilophus astorquii

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

The evolution of exaggerated secondary sexual characteristics has interested scientists since Charles Darwin (Andersson, 1994; Berglund et al, 1996; Darwin, 1871; Fisher, 1930; Zahavi, 1975). Exaggerated traits have two potential functions: they can act as ornaments in intersexual selection and/or as armaments in intrasexual competition (Darwin, 1871) In both cases, they play important roles, for example, in signaling their bearers’ condition to conspecifics of the same or opposite sex (Andersson, 1986; O'Brien et al, 2017; Searcy & Nowicki, 2005; Smith & Harper, 2003; Warren et al, 2013). We explored whether nuchal humps impose a cost in terms of natural selection, swimming performance, that might explain how further exaggeration of this trait is limited

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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