Litcius/Paper detail

Much more than a clasp: evolutionary patterns of amplexus diversity in anurans

Juan D. Carvajal-Castro, Yelenny López-Aguirre, Ana María Ospina-L, Juan C. Santos, Bibiana Rojas, Fernando Vargas‐Salinas

2020Biological Journal of the Linnean Society36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The evolution and diversification of animal reproductive modes have been pivotal questions in behavioural ecology. Amphibians present the highest diversity of reproductive modes among vertebrates, involving various behavioural, physiological and morphological traits. One such feature is the amplexus, which is the clasp or embrace of males on females during reproduction and is found almost universally in anurans. Hypotheses about the origin of amplexus are limited and have not been tested thoroughly, nor have they taken into account evolutionary relationships in most comparative studies. However, these considerations are crucial to an understanding of the evolution of reproductive modes. Here, using an evolutionary framework, we reconstruct the ancestral state of amplexus in 685 anuran species. We investigate whether the type of amplexus has a strong phylogenetic signal and test whether sexual size dimorphism could have influenced amplexus type or male performance while clasping females. Overall, we found evidence of ≥34 evolutionary transitions in amplexus type across anurans. We found that amplexus type exhibits a high phylogenetic signal and that amplexus type does not evolve in association with sexual size dimorphism. We discuss the implications of our findings for the diversity of amplexus types across anurans.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySexual dimorphismPhylogenetic treeEvolutionary biologyPhylogenetic comparative methodsDiversity (politics)ZoologyBehavioral ecologyEcologyGeneticsAnthropologyGeneSociologyAmphibian and Reptile BiologyAnimal Behavior and ReproductionWildlife Ecology and Conservation