TY - JOUR
T1 - Red operculum spots, body size, maturation and evidence for a satellite male phenotype in non-native European populations of pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus
AU - Zięba, Grzegorz
AU - Smith, Carl Hendrik
AU - Fox, Michael G.
AU - Yavno, Stan
AU - Záhorská, Eva
AU - Przybylski, Mirosław
AU - Masson, Gérard
AU - Cucherousset, Julien
AU - Verreycken, Hugo
AU - van Kleef, Hein H.
AU - Copp, Gordon H.
N1 - This study, which derives from work initiated as part of a N.A.T.O. Collaborative Linkage Grant (LST‐CLG No. 979499), supported by consecutive research contracts (SF0238 and SF0248) from the UK Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (to GHC), which were complemented by a Marie Curie postdoctoral fellowship (PIEF‐GA‐2008‐219707) and a subsequent research grant from the National Science Centre, Poland (decision No DEC‐2011/01/D/NZ8/01807) to GZ.
PY - 2018/3/23
Y1 - 2018/3/23
N2 - Carotenoid‐based pigmentation is a striking feature of many taxa, yet the function, if any, of colour traits is often unclear. Pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus, a widely introduced freshwater sunfish that exhibits alternative male mating strategies, express a striking, red operculum spot. To investigate the potential function of this red spot as a signal in this species' mating system, we determined the presence and measured the size of red operculum spots in fish collected from 12 populations in five European countries in which pumpkinseed is an established non‐native species. We subsequently related the presence and size of the red spot to body size and mating strategy, based on an analysis of relative gonad size (gonado‐somatic index, GSI), using a mixed modelling approach. The study demonstrated that the presence of a red operculum spot in pumpkinseed is associated with sexual maturation, with GSI frequency distributions suggesting that cuckolders in some non‐native populations comprised both sneaker and satellite males, the latter not having previously been reported for this species. Further, the size of red spot correlated strongly with body size in parental and cuckolder males, although there was no difference in the presence or size of the red operculum spot between male mating strategies. The function of a red operculum spot in females is not clear but may be partly mediated by pleiotropic genetic mechanisms. Red operculum spots appear to function as signals of male maturation and body size in pumpkinseed, irrespective of mating strategy.
AB - Carotenoid‐based pigmentation is a striking feature of many taxa, yet the function, if any, of colour traits is often unclear. Pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus, a widely introduced freshwater sunfish that exhibits alternative male mating strategies, express a striking, red operculum spot. To investigate the potential function of this red spot as a signal in this species' mating system, we determined the presence and measured the size of red operculum spots in fish collected from 12 populations in five European countries in which pumpkinseed is an established non‐native species. We subsequently related the presence and size of the red spot to body size and mating strategy, based on an analysis of relative gonad size (gonado‐somatic index, GSI), using a mixed modelling approach. The study demonstrated that the presence of a red operculum spot in pumpkinseed is associated with sexual maturation, with GSI frequency distributions suggesting that cuckolders in some non‐native populations comprised both sneaker and satellite males, the latter not having previously been reported for this species. Further, the size of red spot correlated strongly with body size in parental and cuckolder males, although there was no difference in the presence or size of the red operculum spot between male mating strategies. The function of a red operculum spot in females is not clear but may be partly mediated by pleiotropic genetic mechanisms. Red operculum spots appear to function as signals of male maturation and body size in pumpkinseed, irrespective of mating strategy.
KW - Alternative mating strategy
KW - Carotenoid
KW - Centrarchidae
KW - GLMM
KW - Sexual selection
KW - Visual signal
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85044294464
U2 - 10.1111/eff.12399
DO - 10.1111/eff.12399
M3 - Article
SN - 0906-6691
VL - Early View
JO - Ecology of Freshwater Fish
JF - Ecology of Freshwater Fish
ER -