Abstract

All too often, studies of sexual selection focus exclusively on the responses in one sex, on single traits, typically those that are exaggerated and strongly sexually dimorphic. They ignore a range of less obvious traits and behavior, in both sexes, involved in the interactions leading to mate choice. To remedy this imbalance, we analyze a textbook example of sexual selection in the stalk‐eyed fly (Diasemopsis meigenii). We studied several traits in a novel, insightful, and efficient experimental design, examining 2,400 male–female pairs in a “round‐robin” array, where each female was tested against multiple males and vice versa. In D. meigenii, females exhibit strong mate preference for males with highly exaggerated eyespan, and so we deliberately constrained variation in male eyespan to reveal the importance of other traits. Males performing more precopulatory behavior were more likely to attempt to mate with females and be accepted by them. However, behavior was not a necessary part of courtship, as it was absent from over almost half the interactions. Males with larger reproductive organs (testes and accessory glands) did not make more mating attempts, but there was a strong tendency for females to accept mating attempts from such males. How females detect differences in male reproductive organ size remains unclear. In addition, females with larger eyespan, an indicator of size and fecundity, attracted more mating attempts from males, but this trait did not alter female acceptance. Genetic variation among males had a strong influence on male mating attempts and female acceptance, both via the traits we studied and other unmeasured attributes. These findings demonstrate the importance of assaying multiple traits in males and females, rather than focusing solely on prominent and exaggerated sexually dimorphic traits. The approach allows a more complete understanding of the complex mating decisions made by both males and females.

Highlights

  • Sex is a complex interplay between individuals of the two sexes

  • We examined how variation in female eyespan, male reproductive traits, and male behavior directed at females affected male–female interactions

  • Studies of sexual selection have emphasized the importance of mate preference for prominent, exaggerated sexual traits (Andersson, 1994; Davies, Krebs, & West, 2012; Maynard Smith & Harper, 2003)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Many factors such as quality, experience, and competitive ability influence mating decisions across space and time (e.g., Andersson, 1994; Cotton, Small, & Pomiankowski, 2006; Miller & Svensson, 2014) Despite this complexity, many studies have adopted a simplifying approach of evaluating the importance of variation in individual traits, usually in one sex (typically males). In order to more fully understand the varied mechanisms that underpin mate choice and the resultant selective pressures on both sexes, it is vital to adopt inclusive experimental designs that account for the multiple traits involved in male–female interactions (Girard et al, 2015; Jones et al, 2014; Parton, 2013) These considerations motivated this study of stalk-­eyed flies, model organisms for studies of sexual selection (Chapman, Pomiankowski, & Fowler, 2005). This proved to be an efficient, balanced, and sufficiently large-­scale way of obtaining concrete evidence about the mating decisions made by each of the sexes

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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