All AbouT SEx 251
Sexual Selection
It is easy to understand how some traits have evolved to become sexually dimorphic.
An individual without gonads will leave no genes to the next generation. Gonads
and genitalia are called primary sexual traits. But Darwin pointed out that other
kinds of traits, such as the male peacock’s spectacular train of feathers, are more dif-
ficult to explain. These are secondary sexual traits, which differ between the sexes
but do not play a direct role in reproduction. A male peacock’s spectacular feathers
make flight more difficult and attract predators, so we might expect them never to
have evolved by natural selection. Interestingly, secondary sexual traits are often
among the most rapidly evolving phenotypic characters. In many groups of animals
and plants, they are the only traits that can reliably distinguish species.
Darwin reasoned that secondary sexual traits must evolve by something other
than selection for survival and the production of gametes. He made several key
observations. Traits with extreme sexual dimorphism tend to be exaggerated much
more often in males than in females. Often these traits are not expressed in imma-
ture males. Most important, these traits are used by males in the mating season
when they interact aggressively with other males and court females.
These observations lead Darwin to propose that these traits have evolved by
sexual selection, which is selection caused by competition for mates among indi-
viduals of the same sex. A male that prevents other males from mating will leave
more copies of his genes to the next generation than they will. Likewise, a male
that attracts many females to mate with him will be more genetically successful
than a male that attracts few or none. Sexual selection can cause the evolution of
traits that decrease survival if the reproductive advantage they produce compen-
sates for that cost. In short, a trait can evolve by sexual selection if it increases a
male’s overall fitness, even if it decreases survival.
Sexual selection is one of Darwin’s most ingenious ideas. He developed it
without the benefit of any data showing whether these traits in fact do decrease
survival but increase male reproductive success. Was Darwin right? Many studies
since his time have verified that secondary sexual traits have exactly these effects.
A simple and elegant experiment with the long-tailed widowbird (Euplectes
progne) shows that the male’s extremely long tail attracts females [1]. Males estab-
lish territories on the African savannah, and females nest on the territory of the
male that attracts them. Males were captured on their territories and divided into
four groups. The tail feathers of the first group were cut to half of their original
Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_10.04.ai Date 11-02-2016
FIGURE 10.4 Anglerfishes (suborder Ceratioidei) have
extreme sexual dimorphism. When a male finds a female,
he bites and attaches himself permanently to her. His
body fuses with hers and his organs largely degenerate
except for his testes, which grow to fill most of his body.
This female has two males attached to her (indicated by the
arrows).
10_EVOL4E_CH10.indd 251 3/22/17 2:25 PM