Abstract

Summary Sexual coercion of females by males is widespread across sexually reproducing species. It stems from a conflict of interest over reproduction and exerts selective pressure on both sexes. For females, there is often a significant energetic cost of exposure to male sexually coercive behaviours.Our understanding of the efficiency of female resistance to male sexually coercive behaviour is key to understanding how sexual conflict contributes to population level dynamics and ultimately to the evolution of sexually antagonistic traits.Overlooked within this context are plastic physiological responses of traits within the lifetime of females that could moderate the energetic cost imposed by coercive males. Here, we examined whether conflict over the frequency and timing of mating between male and female guppies Poecilia reticulata can induce changes in swimming performance and aerobic capacity in females as they work to escape harassment by males.Females exposed to higher levels of harassment over a 5‐month period used less oxygen to swim at a given speed, but displayed no difference in resting metabolic rate, maximal metabolic rate, maximal sustained swimming speed or aerobic scope compared to females receiving lower levels of harassment.The observed increase in swimming efficiency is at least partially related to differences in swimming mechanics, likely brought on by a training effect of increased activity, as highly harassed females spent less time performing pectoral fin‐assisted swimming.Sexual conflict results in sexually antagonistic traits that impose a variety of costs, but our results show that females can reduce costs through phenotypic plasticity. It is also possible that phenotypic plasticity in swimming physiology or mechanics in response to sexual coercion can potentially give females more control over matings and affect which male traits are under selection.

Highlights

  • Over the last century, our interpretation of reproductive interactions between the sexes has changed from one of cooperation to one of probable conflict, that is a disparity in the evolutionary reproductive interests of males and females (Darwin 1871; Parker 1979)

  • Our understanding of the efficiency of female resistance to male sexually coercive behaviour is key to understanding how sexual conflict contributes to population level dynamics and to the evolution of sexually antagonistic traits

  • We examined whether conflict over the frequency and timing of mating between male and female guppies Poecilia reticulata can induce changes in swimming performance and aerobic capacity in females as they work to escape harassment by males

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Summary

Introduction

Our interpretation of reproductive interactions between the sexes has changed from one of cooperation to one of probable conflict, that is a disparity in the evolutionary reproductive interests of males and females (Darwin 1871; Parker 1979). Chapuis 1996; Darden & Croft 2008; Croft, Darden & Ruxton 2009) or by forming social structures to fend off male attacks (Agrillo, Dadda & Bisazza 2006; Silk 2007; Brask et al 2012) It is unknown, whether females can display plasticity in physiological traits that reduce the costs of being harassed. Harassment could constitute an ecological context in which a training effect of repeated physical activity may manifest, generating intraspecific variation in traits associated with locomotory ability and energy use This is especially likely given the advantages that could be gained by individuals that are able to reduce the costs of harassment (Magurran & Seghers 1994b). We propose that the physical exercise involved with sexual harassment in nature may act to alter metabolic traits, movement mechanics and, levels of physical performance in females that could reduce the costs of harassment

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