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Journal ArticleDOI

Body size and alternative mating tactics in the beewolf Philanthus zebratus (Hymenoptera; Sphecidae)

TLDR
It is suggested that the presence of patrolling males is related to the higher nest density of the one population, and the fact that patrolling males tend to be relatively large is possibly related to flight energetics or simply to the ability of large males to seize females, which are usually larger than males, in mid-air.
Abstract
A study of the mating behaviour of males of the beewolf Philanthus zebratus revealed that in one population males display variability in mating tactics and that this variability is related to male body size. There was a tendency for large males to patrol the airspace above the nesting area while smaller males were territorial adjacent to it. The mean sizes of the two groups of males were significantly different, although the size ranges of the two groups overlapped. Only 2.5% of the males were observed to undertake both mating tactics, at different times. Observations are presented on daily and seasonal activity patterns and on the relative location of nests, territories, and patrolling males. A second population, with lower nest density, was observed for several days, revealing only territorial males. It is suggested that the presence of patrolling males is related to the higher nest density of the one population. The fact that patrolling males tend to be relatively large is possibly related to flight energetics or simply to the ability of large males to seize females, which are usually larger than males, in mid-air.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Evolution of Threshold Traits in Animals

TL;DR: The threshold model of quantitative genetics, in which discrete morphs are determined by some underlying continuously distributed trait and a threshold(s) of expression, is applied appropriately in these cases, shows that no morph has a universally higher fitness, but that there is a tradeoff, with the relative fitnesses of two morphs being contingent upon environmental conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sexual Selection Versus Alternative Causes of Sexual Dimorphism in Teiid Lizards

TL;DR: Observational field data were used to tentatively conclude that intrasexual selection was the cause of larger body size of C. tigris males relative to females because larger males won in male aggressive interactions and had higher reproductive success.
Journal ArticleDOI

Male-female conflict and genitalia: failure to confirm predictions in insects and spiders.

TL;DR: This article uses the massive but hitherto under‐utilized taxonomic literature on genitalic evolution to test, in a two‐step process, whether such new models of arms races between males and females have been responsible for rapid divergent evolution of male genitalia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alternative mating strategies in a desert grasshopper: evidence of density-dependence

TL;DR: Mating behaviour was independent of body size and, while young males tended to be inactive, neither age nor the time of adult maturation during the season could fully account for the incidence of inactive behaviour among males.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alternative male mating tactics in bembecinus quinquespinosus hymenoptera sphecidae correlations with size and color variation

TL;DR: It is suggested that sexual size dimorphism has disappeared in this species because males have evolved larger size, rather than because selection pressures on female size have been relaxed.
References
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Journal Article

The energetic cost of moving about.

Vance A. Tucker
- 01 Jul 1975 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Male Mating Strategies in the Bee Centris pallida Fox (Anthophoridae: Hymenoptera)

TL;DR: The possibility that females which provision a number of small cells (thus producing several small males) may be as fit as or fitter than females that divide their investment into relatively few packets and produce a few large males is examined.
Book

Size and Cycle: An Essay on the Structure of Biology

TL;DR: The view taken here is that the life cycle is the central unit in biology, and the notion of the organism is used in this sense, rather than that of an individual at a moment in time, such as the adult at maturity.