Female sika deer have evolved larger incisors than males under relaxed selection against rapid tooth wear

Incisor size is associated with feeding efficiency in herbivorous ungulates and may have been under selection in correspondence with food habits. In the meantime, males of polygynous, dimorphic species have smaller cheek teeth than females, possibly because their reproductive span is much shorter th...

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Published inBiological journal of the Linnean Society Vol. 110; no. 2; pp. 384 - 397
Main Authors Kubo, Mugino O., Minami, Masato, Higuchi, Naoko, Ohnishi, Nobumasa, Okada, Ayumi, Kaji, Koichi, Ohba, Takahiro, Hosoi, Eiji, Koizumi, Toru, Takatsuki, Seiki
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Oxford University Press 01.10.2013
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Abstract Incisor size is associated with feeding efficiency in herbivorous ungulates and may have been under selection in correspondence with food habits. In the meantime, males of polygynous, dimorphic species have smaller cheek teeth than females, possibly because their reproductive span is much shorter than that of females. Thus, males are not under selection for more durable teeth when there is no reproductive return. Therefore, incisor size is expected to be under natural selection against wear and under the influence of sex‐based differences in reproductive strategy. We first investigated incisor wear in Japanese sika deer (Cervus nippon) and compared wear rates between the sexes and two ecologically contrasting populations on Kinkazan Island and Mt. Goyo. We then compared unworn incisor size to test the hypotheses that female deer have relatively larger incisors than males and a population with faster incisor wear has larger incisors. The Kinkazan deer showed significantly faster wear than those on Mt. Goyo, and Kinkazan males had faster wear than Kinkazan females. Unworn incisor size was relatively larger for females than that for males and was larger for Kinkazan deer than that for Mt. Goyo deer. The sex‐based difference in incisor size was greater in Mt. Goyo deer than that in Kinkazan deer. These findings support the hypothesis that sex‐based differences in reproductive span result in larger incisor size for female sika deer and imply that strong natural selection against rapid tooth wear diminishes sex‐based differences in incisor size in Kinkazan deer. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2013, 110, 384–397.
AbstractList Incisor size is associated with feeding efficiency in herbivorous ungulates and may have been under selection in correspondence with food habits. In the meantime, males of polygynous, dimorphic species have smaller cheek teeth than females, possibly because their reproductive span is much shorter than that of females. Thus, males are not under selection for more durable teeth when there is no reproductive return. Therefore, incisor size is expected to be under natural selection against wear and under the influence of sex-based differences in reproductive strategy. We first investigated incisor wear in Japanese sika deer (Cervus nippon) and compared wear rates between the sexes and two ecologically contrasting populations on Kinkazan Island and Mt. Goyo. We then compared unworn incisor size to test the hypotheses that female deer have relatively larger incisors than males and a population with faster incisor wear has larger incisors. The Kinkazan deer showed significantly faster wear than those on Mt. Goyo, and Kinkazan males had faster wear than Kinkazan females. Unworn incisor size was relatively larger for females than that for males and was larger for Kinkazan deer than that for Mt. Goyo deer. The sex-based difference in incisor size was greater in Mt. Goyo deer than that in Kinkazan deer. These findings support the hypothesis that sex-based differences in reproductive span result in larger incisor size for female sika deer and imply that strong natural selection against rapid tooth wear diminishes sex-based differences in incisor size in Kinkazan deer. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2013, 110, 384-397. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
Incisor size is associated with feeding efficiency in herbivorous ungulates and may have been under selection in correspondence with food habits. In the meantime, males of polygynous, dimorphic species have smaller cheek teeth than females, possibly because their reproductive span is much shorter than that of females. Thus, males are not under selection for more durable teeth when there is no reproductive return. Therefore, incisor size is expected to be under natural selection against wear and under the influence of sex‐based differences in reproductive strategy. We first investigated incisor wear in Japanese sika deer (Cervus nippon) and compared wear rates between the sexes and two ecologically contrasting populations on Kinkazan Island and Mt. Goyo. We then compared unworn incisor size to test the hypotheses that female deer have relatively larger incisors than males and a population with faster incisor wear has larger incisors. The Kinkazan deer showed significantly faster wear than those on Mt. Goyo, and Kinkazan males had faster wear than Kinkazan females. Unworn incisor size was relatively larger for females than that for males and was larger for Kinkazan deer than that for Mt. Goyo deer. The sex‐based difference in incisor size was greater in Mt. Goyo deer than that in Kinkazan deer. These findings support the hypothesis that sex‐based differences in reproductive span result in larger incisor size for female sika deer and imply that strong natural selection against rapid tooth wear diminishes sex‐based differences in incisor size in Kinkazan deer. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2013, 110, 384–397.
Incisor size is associated with feeding efficiency in herbivorous ungulates and may have been under selection in correspondence with food habits. In the meantime, males of polygynous, dimorphic species have smaller cheek teeth than females, possibly because their reproductive span is much shorter than that of females. Thus, males are not under selection for more durable teeth when there is no reproductive return. Therefore, incisor size is expected to be under natural selection against wear and under the influence of sex-based differences in reproductive strategy. We first investigated incisor wear in J apanese sika deer ( C ervus nippon) and compared wear rates between the sexes and two ecologically contrasting populations on K inkazan I sland and M t. G oyo. We then compared unworn incisor size to test the hypotheses that female deer have relatively larger incisors than males and a population with faster incisor wear has larger incisors. The K inkazan deer showed significantly faster wear than those on M t. G oyo, and K inkazan males had faster wear than K inkazan females. Unworn incisor size was relatively larger for females than that for males and was larger for K inkazan deer than that for M t. G oyo deer. The sex-based difference in incisor size was greater in M t. G oyo deer than that in K inkazan deer. These findings support the hypothesis that sex-based differences in reproductive span result in larger incisor size for female sika deer and imply that strong natural selection against rapid tooth wear diminishes sex-based differences in incisor size in K inkazan deer.[copy 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2013, 110, 384-397.
Author Okada, Ayumi
Ohba, Takahiro
Koizumi, Toru
Higuchi, Naoko
Kubo, Mugino O.
Ohnishi, Nobumasa
Takatsuki, Seiki
Kaji, Koichi
Minami, Masato
Hosoi, Eiji
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SubjectTerms Cervus nippon
food habits
grazing
incisor arcade breadth
morphology
sexual dimorphism
sexual selection
Title Female sika deer have evolved larger incisors than males under relaxed selection against rapid tooth wear
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