Rensching cats and dogs: feeding ecology and fecundity trends explain variation in the allometry of sexual size dimorphism

The tendency for sexual size dimorphism (SSD) to increase with body mass in taxa where males are larger, and to decrease when females are larger, is known as Rensch's rule. In mammals, where the trend occurs, it is believed to be the result of a competitive advantage for larger males, while fem...

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Main Authors: P. J. Johnson, M. J. Noonan, A. C. Kitchener, L. A. Harrington, C. Newman, D. W. Macdonald
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170453
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spelling doaj-f7b21fe2c73f440097f92b36540a38ec2020-11-25T04:02:57ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-014610.1098/rsos.170453170453Rensching cats and dogs: feeding ecology and fecundity trends explain variation in the allometry of sexual size dimorphismP. J. JohnsonM. J. NoonanA. C. KitchenerL. A. HarringtonC. NewmanD. W. MacdonaldThe tendency for sexual size dimorphism (SSD) to increase with body mass in taxa where males are larger, and to decrease when females are larger, is known as Rensch's rule. In mammals, where the trend occurs, it is believed to be the result of a competitive advantage for larger males, while female mass is constrained by the energetics of reproduction. Here, we examine the allometry of SSD within the Felidae and Canidae, demonstrating distinctly different patterns: in felids, there is positive allometric scaling, while there is no trend in canids. We hypothesize that feeding ecology, via its effect on female spacing patterns, is responsible for the difference; larger male mass may be advantageous only where females are dispersed such that males can defend access to them. This is supported by the observation that felids are predominately solitary, and all are obligate carnivores. Similarly, carnivorous canids are more sexually dimorphic than insectivores and omnivores, but carnivory does not contribute to a Rensch effect as dietary variation occurs across the mass spectrum. The observed inter-familial differences are also consistent with reduced constraints on female mass in the canids, where litter size increases with body mass, versus no observable allometry in the felids.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170453dimorphismfelidaecanidaeallometryresource dispersiondiet
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author P. J. Johnson
M. J. Noonan
A. C. Kitchener
L. A. Harrington
C. Newman
D. W. Macdonald
spellingShingle P. J. Johnson
M. J. Noonan
A. C. Kitchener
L. A. Harrington
C. Newman
D. W. Macdonald
Rensching cats and dogs: feeding ecology and fecundity trends explain variation in the allometry of sexual size dimorphism
Royal Society Open Science
dimorphism
felidae
canidae
allometry
resource dispersion
diet
author_facet P. J. Johnson
M. J. Noonan
A. C. Kitchener
L. A. Harrington
C. Newman
D. W. Macdonald
author_sort P. J. Johnson
title Rensching cats and dogs: feeding ecology and fecundity trends explain variation in the allometry of sexual size dimorphism
title_short Rensching cats and dogs: feeding ecology and fecundity trends explain variation in the allometry of sexual size dimorphism
title_full Rensching cats and dogs: feeding ecology and fecundity trends explain variation in the allometry of sexual size dimorphism
title_fullStr Rensching cats and dogs: feeding ecology and fecundity trends explain variation in the allometry of sexual size dimorphism
title_full_unstemmed Rensching cats and dogs: feeding ecology and fecundity trends explain variation in the allometry of sexual size dimorphism
title_sort rensching cats and dogs: feeding ecology and fecundity trends explain variation in the allometry of sexual size dimorphism
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The tendency for sexual size dimorphism (SSD) to increase with body mass in taxa where males are larger, and to decrease when females are larger, is known as Rensch's rule. In mammals, where the trend occurs, it is believed to be the result of a competitive advantage for larger males, while female mass is constrained by the energetics of reproduction. Here, we examine the allometry of SSD within the Felidae and Canidae, demonstrating distinctly different patterns: in felids, there is positive allometric scaling, while there is no trend in canids. We hypothesize that feeding ecology, via its effect on female spacing patterns, is responsible for the difference; larger male mass may be advantageous only where females are dispersed such that males can defend access to them. This is supported by the observation that felids are predominately solitary, and all are obligate carnivores. Similarly, carnivorous canids are more sexually dimorphic than insectivores and omnivores, but carnivory does not contribute to a Rensch effect as dietary variation occurs across the mass spectrum. The observed inter-familial differences are also consistent with reduced constraints on female mass in the canids, where litter size increases with body mass, versus no observable allometry in the felids.
topic dimorphism
felidae
canidae
allometry
resource dispersion
diet
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170453
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