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Journal ArticleDOI

Wing pigmentation, immune ability, fat reserves and territorial status in males of the rubyspot damselfly, Hetaerina americana

TLDR
In this paper, a series of immune-based assumptions were tested in the territorial damselfly Hetaerina americana, whose males bear wing pigmentation patterns, which are maintained via male-male competition.
Abstract
An explanation for courting traits is that they convey information about the bearer’s condition to conspecifics, more specifically immune ability. Here we test a series of immune-based assumptions in the territorial damselfly Hetaerina americana, whose males bear wing pigmentation patterns, which are maintained via male–male competition. H. americana males emerge and take some time to mature sexually, after which, depending on their fat reserves, may start defending territories where females arrive at for copulation. Territorial males are eventually defeated and lose their territories. This loss is a consequence of a reduction in muscular fat reserves. We tested whether: (a) territorial males had more pigmented wings, more intense melanine-based immune response (encapsulation response to a nylon filament implant) and higher fat reserves than non-territorial males; (b) pigmentation is related to immunity and fat reserves; (c) the immune response held constant in two different episodes (3 days between each) in the same male during territorial tenure; and (d) immune response and fat reserves decreased after experimentally simulated fighting event. Our results agree with current views of immune ability and courting traits: (1) territorial males had more wing pigmentation, higher immune responses and fat reserves than non-territorial males; (2) pigmentation was also correlated with immunity and fat reserves; and (3) immune response was similarly intense in the two episodes during territorial tenure. However, this response and fat reserves were considerably lower after fighting compared to that of territorial males and non-territorial males. Our work points out a link between fat reserves and immune ability which agree with previous studies in insects. Given, however, that in this species the use of wing pigmentation via male–male competition is more likely to provide information about current fat reserves than immunity, it is suggested that immune ability is only indirectly selected and may not be the information that pigmentation would convey to conspecifics.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The neonicotinoids thiacloprid, imidacloprid, and clothianidin affect the immunocompetence of honey bees (Apis mellifera L.).

TL;DR: The results suggest that neonicotinoids affect the individual immunocompetence of honey bees, possibly leading to an impaired disease resistance capacity.
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Mating and immunity in invertebrates

TL;DR: In invertebrates, the evidence that immunity is under sexual selection, both pre- and post-mating, is critically examined and it is suggested that progress can quickly be made by exploiting the intrinsic strengths of invertebrate model systems.
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Evolutionary ecology of Odonata: a complex life cycle perspective.

TL;DR: An ontogenetic perspective is presented to analyze and summarize the complex life cycle of Odonata within an evolutionary ecology framework and underline the role of the identified numerical and carry-over effects in shaping population and metapopulation dynamics and the community structure across habitat boundaries.
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The ontogeny of immunity: development of innate immune strength in the honey bee (Apis mellifera).

TL;DR: It is found that adult honey bees do not abandon cellular immunocompetence as has recently been proposed, and induced shifts in behavioral roles may increase a colony's susceptibility to disease if nurses begin foraging activity prematurely.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sexual size dimorphism in the American rubyspot: male body size predicts male competition and mating success

TL;DR: The results suggest that in this territorial damselfly species male-biased size dimorphism is driven by large male size in male-male competition being selectively advantageous in territory acquisition and/or maintenance and it is suggested that small size is advantageous in nonterritorial males to improve their agility in courting (or subduing) females.
References
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Book

The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex

TL;DR: In this paper, secondary sexual characters of fishes, amphibians and reptiles are presented. But the authors focus on the secondary sexual characteristics of fishes and amphibians rather than the primary sexual characters.
Journal Article

The descent of man and selection in relation to sex: documento

TL;DR: Part I. Sexual Selection (continued): Secondary sexual characters of fishes, amphibians and reptiles, and secondarySexual characters of birds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heritable true fitness and bright birds: a role for parasites?

TL;DR: In this paper, a combination of seven surveys of blood parasites in North American passerines reveals weak, highly significant association over species between incidence of chronic blood infections (five genera of protozoa and one nematode) and striking display (three characters: male "brightness", female "brights", and male song).
Journal ArticleDOI

Parasites, bright males, and the immunocompetence handicap

TL;DR: A phenomenological model is presented, operating on an intraspecific level, which views the cost of secondary sexual development from an endocrinological perspective and proposes a negative-feedback loop between signal intensity and parasite burden by suggesting that testosterone-dependent signal intensity is a plastic response.
BookDOI

The descent of man, and Selection in relation to sex, Vol 1.

TL;DR: The descent of man and selection in relation to sex vol 1 are a good way to achieve details about operating certain equipments using instruction manuals.
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