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Evolution of correlated complexity in the radically different courtship signals of birds-of-paradise

View ORCID ProfileRussell A Ligon, Christopher D Diaz, View ORCID ProfileJanelle L Morano, Jolyon Troscianko, Martin Stevens, Annalyse Moskeland, Timothy G Laman, View ORCID ProfileEdwin Scholes III
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/351437
Russell A Ligon
Cornell Lab of Ornithology;
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  • For correspondence: russell.ligon@gmail.com
Christopher D Diaz
Cornell Lab of Ornithology;
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Janelle L Morano
Cornell Lab of Ornithology;
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Jolyon Troscianko
University of Exeter;
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Martin Stevens
University of Exeter;
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Annalyse Moskeland
Cornell Lab of Ornithology;
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Timothy G Laman
Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University
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Edwin Scholes
Cornell Lab of Ornithology;
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Abstract

Ornaments used in courtship often vary wildly among species, reflecting the evolutionary interplay between mate preference functions and the constraints imposed by natural selection. Consequently, understanding the evolutionary dynamics responsible for ornament diversification has been a longstanding challenge in evolutionary biology. However, comparing radically different ornaments across species, as well as different classes of ornaments within species, is a profound challenge to understanding diversification of sexual signals. Using novel methods and a unique natural history dataset, we explore evolutionary patterns of ornament evolution in a group − the birds-of-paradise − exhibiting dramatic phenotypic diversification widely assumed to be driven by sexual selection. Rather than the tradeoff between ornament types originally envisioned by Darwin and Wallace, we found positive correlations among cross-modal (visual/acoustic) signals indicating functional integration of ornamental traits into a composite unit − the courtship phenotype. Furthermore, given the broad theoretical and empirical support for the idea that systemic robustness − functional overlap and interdependency − promotes evolutionary innovation, we posit that birds-of-paradise have radiated extensively through ornamental phenotype space as a consequence of the robustness in the courtship phenotype that we document at a phylogenetic scale. We suggest that the degree of robustness in courtship phenotypes among taxa can provide new insights into the relative influence of sexual and natural selection on phenotypic radiations.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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  • Posted June 20, 2018.

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Evolution of correlated complexity in the radically different courtship signals of birds-of-paradise
Russell A Ligon, Christopher D Diaz, Janelle L Morano, Jolyon Troscianko, Martin Stevens, Annalyse Moskeland, Timothy G Laman, Edwin Scholes III
bioRxiv 351437; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/351437
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Evolution of correlated complexity in the radically different courtship signals of birds-of-paradise
Russell A Ligon, Christopher D Diaz, Janelle L Morano, Jolyon Troscianko, Martin Stevens, Annalyse Moskeland, Timothy G Laman, Edwin Scholes III
bioRxiv 351437; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/351437

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