Abstract

BackgroundMost animal species display Sexual Size Dimorphism (SSD): males and females consistently attain different sizes, most frequently with females being larger than males. However the selective mechanisms driving patterns of SSD remain controversial. ‘Rensch's rule’ proposes a general scaling phenomenon for all taxa, whereby SSD increases with average body size when males are larger than females, and decreases with body size when females are larger than males. Rensch's rule appears to be general in the former case, but there is little evidence for the rule when females are larger then males.Methodology/Principal FindingsUsing comprehensive data for 1291 species of birds across 30 families, we find strong support for Rensch's rule in families where males are typically larger than females, but no overall support for the rule in families with female-biased SSD. Reviewing previous studies of a broad range of taxa (arthropods, reptiles, fish and birds) showing predominantly female-biased SSD, we conclude that Rensch's conjecture is the exception rather than the rule in such species.Conclusions/SignificanceThe absence of consistent scaling of SSD in taxa with female-biased SSD, the most prevalent direction of dimorphism, calls into question previous general evolutionary explanations for Rensch's rule. We propose that, unlike several other ecological scaling relationships, Rensch's rule does not exist as an independent scaling phenomenon.

Highlights

  • Most species of animal display Sexual Size Dimorphism (SSD): males and females consistently attain different sizes [1,2,3,4]

  • Family-specific slope estimates are plotted against the proportion of species in each family with MBSSD (PMB) in figure 3

  • Treating PMB as a continuous variable, the significant regression of family-specific slope on PMB has an intercept of 0.99 (95% C.I.: 0.95–1.03), which indicates a predicted slope indistinguishable from 1 in a family with exclusively female-biased SSD (FBSSD)

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Summary

Introduction

Most species of animal display Sexual Size Dimorphism (SSD): males and females consistently attain different sizes [1,2,3,4]. Most animal species display Sexual Size Dimorphism (SSD): males and females consistently attain different sizes, most frequently with females being larger than males. Using comprehensive data for 1291 species of birds across 30 families, we find strong support for Rensch’s rule in families where males are typically larger than females, but no overall support for the rule in families with female-biased SSD. Reviewing previous studies of a broad range of taxa (arthropods, reptiles, fish and birds) showing predominantly female-biased SSD, we conclude that Rensch’s conjecture is the exception rather than the rule in such species. The absence of consistent scaling of SSD in taxa with female-biased SSD, the most prevalent direction of dimorphism, calls into question previous general evolutionary explanations for Rensch’s rule. Unlike several other ecological scaling relationships, Rensch’s rule does not exist as an independent scaling phenomenon

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