The geography of sexual conflict: a synthetic review

Date

2021-06-22

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Bacon, Ryan et al. "The geography of sexual conflict: a synthetic review." The American Naturalist (2022). doi: 10.1086/722797.

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Subjects

Abstract

Sexual conflict is a mechanism of selection driven by the divergent fitness interests between females and males. This disagreement can be great enough to promote antagonistic/defensive traits and behaviors. Although the existence of sexual conflict has been identified in many species, less research has explored the conditions that initially promote sexual conflict in animal mating systems. In previous works on Opiliones, we observed morphological traits associated with sexual conflict only occurred in species from northern localities. We hypothesized that, by shortening and compartmentalizing time periods optimal for reproduction, seasonality represents a geographic condition sufficient to promote sexual conflict. We conducted a systematic review of literature on reproductive traits and behaviors. Using standardized criteria, we reviewed publications to identify whether subjects occurred in a temperate (high seasonality) or tropical (low seasonality) biome. After identifying and adjusting for a publication bias towards temperate research, we identified no significant difference in the strength of sexual conflict between temperate and tropical study systems. A comparison between the distribution of taxa studied in sexual conflict papers and papers focused on general biodiversity indicates species with conflict-based mating systems more accurately represent the distribution of terrestrial animal species. These findings contribute to ongoing efforts to characterize the origins of sexual conflict, as well as life history traits that co-vary with sexual conflict. This is the author's accepted manuscript without copyediting, formatting, or final corrections. It will be published in its final form in an upcoming issue of The American Naturalist, published by The University of Chicago Press. Include the DOI when citing or quoting: https://doi.org/10.1086/722797. Copyright 2022 The University of Chicago.