학술논문

Reproductive interference explains persistence of aggression between species
Document Type
article
Source
Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 282(1804)
Subject
Zoology
Ecology
Biological Sciences
Aggression
Animals
Biological Evolution
Central America
Color
Female
Insect Proteins
Male
Models
Biological
Molecular Sequence Data
North America
Odonata
Phylogeny
Reproduction
Selection
Genetic
Sequence Analysis
DNA
Territoriality
Visual Perception
interspecific territoriality
species recognition
interference competition
character displacement
damselfly
Hetaerina
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Agricultural
veterinary and food sciences
Biological sciences
Environmental sciences
Language
Abstract
Interspecific territoriality occurs when individuals of different species fight over space, and may arise spontaneously when populations of closely related territorial species first come into contact. But defence of space is costly, and unless the benefits of excluding heterospecifics exceed the costs, natural selection should favour divergence in competitor recognition until the species no longer interact aggressively. Ordinarily males of different species do not compete for mates, but when males cannot distinguish females of sympatric species, females may effectively become a shared resource. We model how reproductive interference caused by undiscriminating males can prevent interspecific divergence, or even cause convergence, in traits used to recognize competitors. We then test the model in a genus of visually orienting insects and show that, as predicted by the model, differences between species pairs in the level of reproductive interference, which is causally related to species differences in female coloration, are strongly predictive of the current level of interspecific aggression. Interspecific reproductive interference is very common and we discuss how it may account for the persistence of interspecific aggression in many taxonomic groups.