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Sex in the city: sexual selection and urban colonization in passerines

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Date

Authors

Iglesias Carrasco, Maider
Duchene, David
Head, Megan
Moller, Anders P.
Cain, Kristal

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Royal Society of London

Abstract

Urbanization leads to a rapid and drastic transformation of habitats, forcing native fauna to manage novel ecological challenges or to move. Sexual selection is a powerful evolutionary force, which is sometimes predicted to enhance the ability of species to adapt to novel environments because it allows females to choose high-quality males, but other times is predicted to reduce the viability of populations because it pushes males beyond naturally selected optima. However, we do not know whether or how sexual selection contributes to the likelihood that animals will establish in urban areas. We use a comparative analysis of passerine birds to test whether traits associated with pre- and post-mating sexual selection predict successful colonization of urban areas. We found that plumage dichromatism was negatively associated with urban tolerance, but found no relationship with sexual size dimorphism or testes mass relative to body mass. While we cannot determine the exact reason why species with high plumage dichromatism occur less in cities, it is likely that urban areas increase the costs of expressing bright coloration due, for instance, to dietary constraints, limited male parental care or increased predation.

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Citation

: Iglesias-Carrasco M, Duchêne DA, Head ML, Møller AP, Cain K. 2019 Sex in the city: sexual selection and urban colonization in passerines.

Source

Biology Letters

Book Title

Evolutionary biology

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31