Abstract

Same-sex sexual behaviour (SSB) is widespread across taxa. One adaptive hypothesis to explain the occurrence and maintenance of SSB is that it acts to intensify or diminish aggression by providing males with a means to reinforce or resolve dominance. However, evidence for this hypothesis is very limited across taxa and the possibility that SSB acts as an extension of intrasexual competition remains contentious. We investigated the role of SSB in intensifying or diminishing aggression in the broad-horned flour beetle, Gnatocerus cornutus. We tested the hypothesis that SSB is an extension of male–male competition by observing how the occurrence of SSB and the stability of SSB courtship roles (i.e. whether males switched between mounting and being mounted) influenced levels of aggression within pairs. We found that, typically, males rapidly establish fixed SSB roles and moreover that the occurrence of SSB and the stability of SSB roles had a highly significant effect on levels of aggression observed within pairs. Pairs in which one male consistently mounted the other showed significantly lower levels of aggression than pairs in which neither male exhibited SSB or in which males continuously switched SSB roles and attempted to mount each other. Furthermore, males that were consistently on the receiving end of SSB demonstrated lower propensity to court females and had a lower mating success than active males. This pattern was analogous to that found in loser males as a result of fighting. Males that lost fights also courted less and had lower mating success than males that won fights. Our findings provide the first empirical support for the hypothesis that SSB is an extension of male–male competition. Furthermore, our results suggest that SSB may act as a display, allowing males to resolve dominance hierarchies without escalating into an injurious fight.

Highlights

  • IntroductionOne adaptive hypothesis to explain the occurrence and maintenance of sex sexual behaviour (SSB) is that it acts to intensify or diminish aggression by providing males with a means to reinforce or resolve dominance

  • All content in PEARL is protected by copyright law

  • Beetles used in this study were taken from stock populations of G. cornutus derived from the Japanese National Food Research Institute (NFRI; see Okada et al, 2006 for details) and reared in our laboratory in the U.K. following the protocol outlined in Lane et al (2015)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

One adaptive hypothesis to explain the occurrence and maintenance of SSB is that it acts to intensify or diminish aggression by providing males with a means to reinforce or resolve dominance. Evidence for this hypothesis is very limited across taxa and the possibility that SSB acts as an extension of intrasexual competition remains contentious. Some insect studies have linked SSB to a reduction in aggression (Peschke, 1985, 1987; Ruther & Steiner, 2008; Steiner, Stiedle, & Ruther, 2005), the evidence is indirect These studies show that when males deliberately mimic a female's chemical profile they are treated as females (i.e. courted and not fought with) but they do not directly show that SSB causes a reduction in aggression. Other studies have found anecdotal evidence to support a direct link between SSB and decreased aggression but this evidence has yet to be backed up empirically (Iguchi, 1996; Preston-Mafham, 2006)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call