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The multiple origins of sexual size dimorphism in global amphibians

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posted on 2025-08-01, 11:49 authored by D Pincheira-Donoso, LP Harvey, F Grattarola, M Jara, SC Cotter, T Tregenza, DJ Hodgson
Aim: Body size explains most of the variation in fitness within animal populations and is therefore under constant selection from ecological and reproductive pressures, which often promote its evolution in sex-specific directions, leading to sexual size dimorphism (SSD). Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain the vast diversity of SSD across species. These hypotheses emphasize: (a) the mate competition benefits to larger male size (sexual selection); (b) the benefits of larger female size for fecundity (fecundity selection); (c) the simultaneous benefits of niche divergence for males and females to reduce intersexual competition for ecological resources (natural selection); and (d) the underlying impact of geographical variation in climatic pressures expected to shape large-scale patterns of SSD in synergy with the above selection pressures (e.g., intensification of fecundity selection as breeding seasons shorten). Based on a new, global-scale amphibian dataset, we address the shortage of large-scale, integrative tests of these four hypotheses. Location: Global. Time period: Extant. Major taxa studied: Class Amphibia. Methods: Using a > 3,500 species dataset spanning body size, ecological, life-history, geographical and climatic data, we performed phylogenetic linear models to address the sexual, fecundity, ecological and climatic hypotheses of SSD. Results: Evolution of SSD is discordant between anurans and salamanders. Anuran SSD is shaped by climate (male-biased SSD increases with temperature seasonality) and by nesting site. In salamanders, SSD converges across species that occupy the same types of microhabitats (“ecodimorphs”), whereas reproductive or climatic pressures have no effects on their SSD. These contrasts are associated with latitudinal gradients of SSD in anurans, but not in salamanders. Main conclusions: Amphibian SSD is driven by ecological and climatic pressures, whereas no roles for sexual or fecundity selection were detected. We show that macroevolutionary processes determined by different forms of selection lead to latitudinal patterns of trait diversity, and the lack of them.

Funding

Agencia Nacional de Investigación e Innovación (ANII) of Uruguay

Environment Now programme

Queen's University Belfast

School of Biological Sciences

History

Rights

© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record Data availability statement: All the datasets used in this study are available as supplementary material to the main article and are open access at the Global Amphibian Biodiversity Project repository at https://www.amphibianbiodiversity.org/datasets.html

Journal

Global Ecology and Biogeography

Publisher

Wiley

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2021-03-18T11:04:10Z

FOA date

2021-11-29T00:00:00Z

Citation

Vol. 30 (2), pp. 443 - 458

Department

  • Archive

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