Skip to Main Content (access key 1)
Skip to Search (access key 2)
Skip to Search GO (access key 3)
Skip to comments (access key 4)
Skip to navigation (access key 5)
Skip to top of page (access key 6)
Wednesday, September 3, 2008 | Reason : In the News | print version Print | Comments

Document How 'Secondary' Sex Characters Can Drive The Origin Of Species

by Science Daily

Thanks to SPS for the link.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/08/080825103553.htm

How 'Secondary' Sex Characters Can Drive The Origin Of Species

ScienceDaily (Aug. 25, 2008) — The ostentatious, sometimes bizarre qualities that improve a creature's chances of finding a mate may also drive the reproductive separation of populations and the evolution of new species, say two Indiana University Bloomington biologists.

In the September 2008 issue of Evolution (now online), Armin Moczek and Harald Parzer examine males from four geographically separated populations of the horned beetle species Onthophagus taurus. The beetles have diverged significantly in the size of the male copulatory organ, and natural selection operating on the other end of the animal -- horns atop the beetles' heads -- seems to be driving it.

"Biologists have known that in these beetles there is an investment trade-off between secondary sexual characters and primary sexual characters," Moczek said. "As horns get bigger, copulatory organs get smaller, or vice versa. What was not known was how frequently and how fast this can occur in nature, and whether this can drive the evolution of new species."

Structures directly involved in mating are known as primary sexual characters, whereas combat structures like horns -- or seductive attributes like a cardinal's vibrant plumage or a bullfrog's deeply resonant baritone -- are known as secondary sexual characters.

Evolutionary biologists believe changes in copulatory organ size and shape can spur speciation by making individuals from different populations sexually incompatible.

Native to Italy, O. taurus exists in other parts of the world only because of recent human activity. This means, Moczek and Parzer say, that the marked divergences they observed in O. taurus's horn and copulatory organ size must have occurred over an extremely short period of time -- 50 years or less.

Despite what many of us are led to believe, variation in male copulatory organ size within species tends to be very low, humans and beetles included. Yet the four O. taurus populations Moczek and Parzer studied in the U.S. (North Carolina), Italy, and western and eastern Australia, exhibit substantial changes in both horn and genitalia length -- as much as 3.5 times, in terms of an "investment" index the scientists devised that takes body size into account.

The scientists examined 10 other Onthophagus species, and as expected, they found vast differences between the species regarding horn and male copulatory organ size. Moczek says this suggests that trade-offs between primary and secondary sexual traits continue to shape the way species diverge well after speciation has occurred.

The speed and magnitude of divergence within O. taurus presents something of a paradox. How is it that copulatory organ size can be so rigorously maintained within the populations of a single species, yet appear so restless to change?

"In terms of the integrity of a species, it's important for these things not to change too much," Moczek explains. "So there is a lot of evidence suggesting that within species or within the populations of species, natural selection maintains genital characters. But if these primary sex characters are linked to other characters that can change readily, then you've got what we think is a very exciting mechanism that could prime populations for reproductive isolation."

Horn length and shape can change for many reasons, Moczek says. Among densely populated species, fighting (which favors large horns) may not be an effective strategy for winning mates. As combative males fight each other, a diminutive, smaller-horned male could simply employ a sneaking strategy to gain access to unguarded females. Under these circumstances, reduced investment in horns seems to result in larger copulatory organs. Alternately, in lower density populations, most male beetles spend a great deal of time fighting. Longer, bigger horns could serve these males well -- and also lead to smaller genitalia.

"If this is all it takes to change genitalia, it may be easier to make new species than we thought," Moczek said.

The notion that genital size is related to the origin of species is not new. But how they are related has perplexed evolutionary biologists. The individuals of most species do not choose mates according to the size and shape of genitalia. Indeed, genitalia may not be relevant until the latter stages of courtship, if at all.

An early "lock and key" model of reproductive isolation was first proposed by L. Dufour in 1844 to explain why some pairs of species, outwardly identical in every way, are unable to mate.

Research discussed in the Evolution paper was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation.

Comments 1 - 23 of 23 |

Reload Comments | Back to Top | Page Numbers

1. Comment #241984 by VanYoungman on September 3, 2008 at 9:21 am

 avatarDon't let the OT Forum people read this.

Other Comments by VanYoungman

2. Comment #242003 by stephensmith on September 3, 2008 at 9:51 am

"... the four O. taurus populations Moczek and Parzer studied in the U.S. (North Carolina), Italy, and western and eastern Australia, exhibit substantial changes in both horn and genitalia length ... ."

So, which of the four has the biggest genitalia? As someone who lives in North Carolina, I have a lot of prestige riding on this one.

Other Comments by stephensmith

3. Comment #242005 by bamafreethinker on September 3, 2008 at 9:52 am

 avatarSo that's why the devil is in such a bad mood... long horns!

God politely asks Satan; "Do you want long horns or a lo..."
Satan impatiently interrupts; "Long horns, long horns!!!
God replies; "But that means that you'll have a sho... "
"Just give me the damned horns!" shouts Satan as his face turns a bright shade of red.
"Okay, you little prick" says the maker with a smile.

Other Comments by bamafreethinker

4. Comment #242011 by Saerain on September 3, 2008 at 10:05 am

 avatarSo we should really stop referring to arousal as being 'horny' but rather perhaps 'short-horned' or 'hornless'.

No, I don't like those. Suggestions?

Other Comments by Saerain

5. Comment #242016 by adrianpatrick on September 3, 2008 at 10:14 am

 avatarInteresting article. And I'm finding some parts of it strangely comforting :)

Other Comments by adrianpatrick

6. Comment #242063 by beeline on September 3, 2008 at 11:03 am

 avatarA similar kind of process has been talked about in bird song, but I can't remember where I heard it.

It only takes a minute change in a bird's song for certain females to be 'turned off' by it, and therefore prevent them mating. And if those songs - or the physical equipment for rendering them - changes sufficiently, you have a group of birds that only mates with 'its own kind'. A new species.

Doesn't really matter whether it can breed with the others; if it doesn't then that's where speciation occurs right there.

Other Comments by beeline

7. Comment #242075 by bamafreethinker on September 3, 2008 at 11:14 am

 avatar
For she doted upon their paramours [lovers], whose flesh [genitals] is as the flesh of asses, and whose issue [semen] is like the issue of horses. - Ezekiel 23:20 KJV


Some of the reasoning behind the Abrahamic religions' treatment of women as property, as apposed to them being free agents, seems to be driven by penis envy : )

An insecure bunch of men on so many different levels.

If you can't win a woman's heart with your charm, hygiene, personality, physical condition, age, etc... then use religion and its arsenal of tools. But what you end up with is a jealous, untrusting, insecure, man who is afraid to even let his property go out in public - a living hell for both parties.

The long horned beetle must be constantly on watch to make sure a fleshier male doesn't sneak in and win the heart of one of his lady beetles. In a free beetle society, the female could just pick the one she finds more attractive - whether he be long horned or long membered.

What survival (reproductive) advantage does long horns (alone) have though? Larger horns are usually accompanied by bigger muscles and physical size which have a more intuitive survival (and hence reproductive) advantage; or is this simply the result of being placed in a more (or less) competitive environment?

EDIT: And we can speculate that the race of people described in Ezekiel above, survived and who's offspring still exist and thrive as modern day actors in the porn industry. Why don't the fundies use this passage as proof that the bible is inspired - no wait... it's because Christians don't watch porn isn't it? : )

Other Comments by bamafreethinker

8. Comment #242081 by BeyondBelief on September 3, 2008 at 11:18 am

 avatarBeeline,

So... my disgust at mating with certain segments of the human population makes them a separate species? Chickus Obesicus?

By that standard there are billions of species being formed and dying every day. Also by that standard, the number of human sub-species in the world is inversely proportionate to the number of beers I have consumed.

Other Comments by BeyondBelief

9. Comment #242093 by Luthien on September 3, 2008 at 11:32 am

 avatarHey, that explains all those men with the big fancy cars...

For the record, my bloke doesn't even own a car *smug grin*

Other Comments by Luthien

10. Comment #242453 by kraut on September 3, 2008 at 6:39 pm

"So... my disgust at mating with certain segments of the human population makes them a separate species? Chickus Obesicus?"

No, it makes you a seperate asshole.

But each to his taste. I like my women well rounded.

Other Comments by kraut

11. Comment #242479 by Rational_Skeptic on September 3, 2008 at 9:26 pm

 avatarLuthien beat me to it.

My guy drives a sub-compact ;-)

Other Comments by Rational_Skeptic

12. Comment #242516 by oasis-al-reason on September 4, 2008 at 1:31 am

 avatarWOW! it works really fast, mine got rid of his fancy wheels just last month and already the effects are astounding.

Other Comments by oasis-al-reason

13. Comment #242525 by King of NH on September 4, 2008 at 2:13 am

 avatarI drive a Honda Metro (a 49cc, 100mpg scooter). I did feel a little, um, girly I think is the scientific term. Now I know why my wife thought it was a good buy (and I thought she was concerned with the environment, or at least gas prices).

Other Comments by King of NH

14. Comment #242558 by root2squared on September 4, 2008 at 4:13 am

 avatarWell, all I have to say is



Other Comments by root2squared

15. Comment #242564 by PJG on September 4, 2008 at 4:48 am

 avatarI do wish the writers of articles like this would stop saying things like
This means, Moczek and Parzer say, that the marked divergences they observed in O. taurus's horn and copulatory organ size must have occurred over an extremely short period of time -- 50 years or less.

without an explanatory note regarding the approximate number of generations involved - or an analogy with the equivalent time in human generations. It really feeds into the "super-evolution" nonsense and enables creationists and ID advocates to say, "there you are, this microevolution can happen really fast". Creationists tend to be so anthropocentric that they don't realise that 50 years in beetle terms is many hundreds of thousands of years in human terms or that "very fast" can mean in geological time rather than their YEC biblical time frame.

Other Comments by PJG

16. Comment #242570 by Ishruul on September 4, 2008 at 5:37 am

 avatarEven if we get more and more evidence with easy to grasp explanation, to IDiots, it doesn't mean crap. Only another trick to test their faith.

On the other hand, if god was to show up someday, they'll certainly try to kill him anyway, because he'll be an abomination to their church or something similar.

Big horn, little genitalia! Big faith, little brain!

Other Comments by Ishruul

17. Comment #242583 by PJG on September 4, 2008 at 6:00 am

 avatar
Even if we get more and more evidence with easy to grasp explanation, to IDiots, it doesn't mean crap. Only another trick to test their faith.


True, to a point, but there seem to be two sorts of creationists.

The ones who are so indoctrinated that nothing will move them (because anything that tests their faith has... by definition, in their minds ... been sent to test their faith) are beyond hope.

However, the other group are the ones who simply don't understand evolution and I believe they can be educated.

It seems a shame to give the creationists more material to quote-mine and otherwise misrepresent.

Other Comments by PJG

18. Comment #242605 by debaser71 on September 4, 2008 at 6:53 am

I know what sexual selection is I just don't see the need to separate it out from other selection processes. They are all related. And when people focus on sexual selection as if it explains everything, I tune out.

Anyway, obligatory creationist mockery now. "But we don't see beetles turning into fish!!!"

Other Comments by debaser71

19. Comment #242616 by bamafreethinker on September 4, 2008 at 7:29 am

 avatarI've often wondered if sexual selection might have a great deal to do with why humans look so much different from the other apes. As for me, the less a woman looks like an ape (less body/facial hair, rounder butt, etc.), the more sexually attractive I find her. A "monkey butt" on a woman is a major turn-off for me - not sure why. Could that be a significant factor that drove us to look like we do? Once we were able to think of ourselves as superior to apes, perhaps looking ape-like was a real turn off sexually? A relatively hairless body may have its disadvantages in most climates, but if turns us on, we figure a way to survive without it - like a peacock overcomes the cost of his elaborate feathers? Just a thought.

Other Comments by bamafreethinker

20. Comment #242639 by stephensmith on September 4, 2008 at 8:55 am

"I considered the horns, and, behold, there came up among them another little horn, before whom there were three of the first horns plucked up by the roots: and, behold, in this horn were eyes like the eyes of man, and a mouth speaking great things." - Daniel 7:8

Just had to throw that in to all this discussion of horniness.

Other Comments by stephensmith

21. Comment #242641 by lbq on September 4, 2008 at 8:56 am

Is this new? I thought this was pretty self-evident decades ago. But we should of course pat the scientists on their heads for finally discovering sexual selection, even if it took them 137 years after Darwin published his theory (Descent of Man)

Other Comments by lbq

22. Comment #242934 by Beachbum on September 4, 2008 at 7:06 pm

 avatarNot that I had given it much thought when I was 4 or 5 years old, but before I became a self proclaimed anti-theist at age 6, I noticed a direct (be it inverse) connection between religiosity and sexuality.
7. Comment #242075 by bamafreethinker

Some of the reasoning behind the Abrahamic religions' treatment of women as property, as apposed to them being free agents, seems to be driven by penis envy : )


I am sure that I do not have to bring up the patriarchal foundations of religions, Abrahamic and otherwise. My question is, how much does bamafreethinker's point and the horned beetle species Onthophagus taurus' male copulatory organ evolution have to do with the long history and incredible survivability of superstition?

The French have a saying,"search for the female" as a key motivator of men. Could this all boil down to size does matter? Or. How to keep a woman, when you smell like camel dung.

Other Comments by Beachbum

23. Comment #243247 by dniete97 on September 5, 2008 at 10:21 am

A "very exciting mechanism" indeed.

Other Comments by dniete97
Reload Comments | Back to Top

Comment Entry: Please Login

Register a new account

Username:

Password: