1. Sexual selection predicts the rate and direction of colour divergence in a large avian radiation
- Author
-
Gavin H. Thomas, Lara O. Nouri, Christopher J. A. Moody, Zoë K. Varley, Michael D Jardine, and Christopher R. Cooney
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Science ,Color ,Datasets as Topic ,General Physics and Astronomy ,02 engineering and technology ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Divergence ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phylogenetics ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Passeriformes ,lcsh:Science ,Proxy (statistics) ,Phylogeny ,Sex Characteristics ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Dichromatism ,Pigmentation ,General Chemistry ,Feathers ,Mating Preference, Animal ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Biological Evolution ,Carotenoids ,Passerine ,030104 developmental biology ,Evolutionary biology ,Plumage ,Sexual selection ,lcsh:Q ,0210 nano-technology ,Sex characteristics - Abstract
Sexual selection is proposed to be a powerful driver of phenotypic evolution in animal systems. At macroevolutionary scales, sexual selection can theoretically drive both the rate and direction of phenotypic evolution, but this hypothesis remains contentious. Here, we find that differences in the rate and direction of plumage colour evolution are predicted by a proxy for sexual selection intensity (plumage dichromatism) in a large radiation of suboscine passerine birds (Tyrannida). We show that rates of plumage evolution are correlated between the sexes, but that sexual selection has a strong positive effect on male, but not female, interspecific divergence rates. Furthermore, we demonstrate that rapid male plumage divergence is biased towards carotenoid-based (red/yellow) colours widely assumed to represent honest sexual signals. Our results highlight the central role of sexual selection in driving avian colour divergence, and reveal the existence of convergent evolutionary responses of animal signalling traits under sexual selection., What factors explain variation in the pace and trajectory of evolutionary divergence between lineages? Here, the authors show that a proxy measure for sexual selection intensity predicts both the rate and direction of plumage colour evolution in a diverse radiation of New World passerine birds.
- Published
- 2019