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A link between heritable parasite resistance and mate choice in dung beetles

Bruno A Buzatto, Janne S Kotiaho, Larissa A F Assis, Leigh W Simmons and Per Smiseth

Behavioral Ecology, 2019, vol. 30, issue 5, 1382-1387

Abstract: Parasites play a central role in the adaptiveness of sexual reproduction. Sexual selection theory suggests a role for parasite resistance in the context of mate choice, but the evidence is mixed. The parasite-mediated sexual selection (PMSS) hypothesis derives a number of predictions, among which that resistance to parasites is heritable, and that female choice favors parasite resistance genes in males. Here, we tested the PMSS hypothesis using the dung beetle Onthophagus taurus, a species that can be heavily parasitized by Macrocheles merdarius mites, which are known to affect adult survival. We investigated the heritability of resistance to M. merdarius, as well as whether female O. taurus impose a mating bias against males susceptible to mite infestation. Female choice for parasite resistance is difficult to disentangle from the possibility that females are simply choosing less parasitized males due to naturally selected benefits of avoiding contracting those parasites. This is especially likely for ectoparasites, such as mites. We tackled this problem by performing a mate choice trial first, and then measuring a male’s resistance to mite infestation. Resistance to mite infestation exhibited significant levels of additive genetic variance. Although we found no relationship between mating success and parasite resistance, males with greater resistance to infestation mated for longer. If females control copula duration, given that short copulations often result in mating failure, female choice could act on parasite resistance. We found that resistance to parasitic mites is highly heritable in male dung beetles, and that males with higher parasite resistance mate for longer, even if they have no parasites at the time of mating. If female dung beetles control copula duration, this means that females chose males on the basis of their parasite resistance, but we still do not know how females evaluate this trait of males.

Keywords: condition dependence; ectoparasitism; Macrocheles; mating success; Onthophagus; sexual selection (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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