What doesn't kill you makes you stronger: Detoxification ability as a mechanism of honesty in a sexually selected signal

Sexual selection leads to the expression and maintenance of colourful signals. The metabolic pathways to produce such signals often involve toxic byproducts that can reduce survival. However, rather than discarding these otherwise harmful byproducts, animals may use them by integrating them into sex...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Functional ecology Vol. 35; no. 8; pp. 1666 - 1678
Main Authors: G‐Santoyo, Isaac, González‐Tokman, Daniel, Tapia‐Rodríguez, Miguel, Córdoba‐Aguilar, Alex
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: London Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01-08-2021
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Sexual selection leads to the expression and maintenance of colourful signals. The metabolic pathways to produce such signals often involve toxic byproducts that can reduce survival. However, rather than discarding these otherwise harmful byproducts, animals may use them by integrating them into sexually selected traits. We tested this using the damselfly Hetaerina americana, where males bear a red wing spot (RWS) that has evolved by intrasexual competition. By using confocal microscopy and several biochemical techniques, we determined that the RWS are generated by ommochrome pigments derived from tryptophan metabolism. Second, we injected a group of males with the toxic precursor of these ommochromes, 3‐hydroxy‐kynurenine (3‐Hk), confirming the toxicity of this compound in adult males. Finally, we showed that adult males injected with a median lethal concentration of 3‐Hk had more ommochromes in their RWS than controls but similar survival, suggesting that the deposition of ommochrome pigment in the wing counteracts the 3‐HK toxicity. Thus, we report that sexually selected pigmented signals may involve the co‐option of excreted compounds that could otherwise have lethal effects, a hypothesis we call ‘detoxifying ability signalling’. Our results provide new insights about the evolution of sexual signals, elucidating a mechanism for the evolution of honest indicators of quality that could have arisen due to natural selection. Resumen La selección sexual es uno de los mecanismos que permite la expresión de múltiples señales coloridas en los animales. La producción y mantenimiento de estasseñales puede involucrar la síntesis de diferentes subproductos tóxicos que afectanla supervivencia de quien los produce. Interesantemente, en vez de eliminarlos,los animales podrían inactivarlos, almacenarlos e integrarlos como parte deestas señales sexuales. Probamos esta idea en la libélula Hetaerina americana. Aquí, los machos presentanun pigmento rojo en la base de sus alas que ha evolucionado como una señal sexual por competencia intrasexual. Con el uso de técnicas bioquímicas y demicroscopia confocal, determinamos que estos pigmentos son omocromos,producidos por el metabolito del triptófano 3‐hidroxy‐Kinurenina (3‐Hk), y observamos que este metabolito es tóxico para los adultos de H.americana. Finalmente, demostramos que los adultos a los que se les administro una dosis letal mediade 3‐Hk, lograron contrarrestarsu toxicidad sintetizando más omocromos y depositándolos en la base de susalas. En conclusión, este estudio demuestra que las señales sexuales pueden también evolucionar como mecanismos honestos de desintoxicación de subproductos metabólicos tóxicos, una hipótesis que hemos llamado “señales de la habilidadde desintoxicación”. Nuestros resultados muestran, por primera vez, una vertiente alternativa sobre laevolución de las señales sexuales, proponiendo un mecanismo de evolución deseñales sexuales honestas, que en un inicio se originó por selección natural. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.
Bibliography:Handling Editor
David Reznick
ISSN:0269-8463
1365-2435
DOI:10.1111/1365-2435.13798