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Research article2007Peer reviewedOpen access

Antler size provides an honest signal of male phenotypic quality in roe deer

Vanpe C, Gaillard JM, Kjellander P, Mysterud A, Magnien P, Delorme D, Van Laere G, Klein F, Liberg O, Hewison AJM

Abstract

Identifying factors shaping secondary sexual traits is essential in understanding how their variation may influence male fitness. Little information is available on the allocation of resources to antler growth in territorial ungulates with low sexual size dimorphism. We investigated phenotypic and environmental factors affecting both absolute and relative antler size of male roe deer in three contrasting populations in France and Sweden. In the three populations, we found marked age-specific variation in antler size, with an increase in both absolute and relative antler size between yearling and prime-age stages, followed by a decrease ( senescence) for males older than 7 years. Antler size increased allometrically with body mass. This increase was particularly strong for senescent males, suggesting the evolution of two reproductive tactics: heavy old males invested particularly heavily in antler growth ( potentially remaining competitive for territories), whereas light old males grew small antlers ( potentially abandoning territory defense). Finally, environmental conditions had little effect on antler size: only population density negatively affected absolute antler size in one of the three populations. Antler size may therefore provide an honest signal of male phenotypic quality in roe deer. We discuss the implications of these results in terms of territory tenure and mating competition

Published in

American Naturalist
2007, Volume: 169, number: 4, pages: 481-493
Publisher: UNIV CHICAGO PRESS

      SLU Authors

    • Kjellander, Petter

      • Department of Conservation Biology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
      • Liberg, Olof

        • Department of Conservation Biology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

      UKÄ Subject classification

      Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use

      Publication identifier

      DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/512046

      Permanent link to this page (URI)

      https://res.slu.se/id/publ/16020