Abstract
Males of Dawson's burrowing bee are dimorphic in size. Although large (major) males defeat smaller ones in competition for emerging females and therefore are more likely to mate, majors are greatly outnumbered by half-sized (minor) males. Nesting females might produce many minor males, despite their low reproductive value, because female behaviour is governed by a mixed evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS), in which case the ratio of majors to miners should not be affected by changes in female condition. In contrast, a conditional-strategy hypothesis predicts that older, wing-worn or stressed females unable to forage efficiently should be especially likely to produce minor offspring, which require less brood provisions. To test these alternative hypotheses, we manipulated the condition of nesting female bees by the addition of weights and the removal of their wing margins. These manipulations, done early in the flight season, failed to increase the production of minor males, a result consistent with the mixed-ESS hypothesis. However, unmanipulated females were far more likely to produce minor males if they were small or if they were nesting late in the season, when foraging conditions had deteriorated, findings that are consistent with a conditional provisioning strategy. Thus it appears that the abundance of minor males is the result of a conditional provisioning strategy of nesting females, which may be superimposed on a fixed tendency to produce large offspring early in the season and small ones later.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 81-89 |
Number of pages | 9 |
Journal | Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology |
Volume | 50 |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2001 |
Keywords
- conditional ESS
- male dimorphism
- female fitness
- ALTERNATIVE REPRODUCTIVE STRATEGIES
- ONTHOPHAGUS-ACUMINATUS COLEOPTERA
- PERDITA-PORTALIS HYMENOPTERA
- MALE-DIMORPHISM
- SEX-RATIO
- SOLITARY BEE
- LIFE-SPAN
- PARENTAL INVESTMENT
- LENGTH DIMORPHISM
- HORN DIMORPHISM