2016
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arw023
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A prison effect in a wild population: a scarcity of females induces homosexual behaviors in males

Abstract: The high frequency of same-sex sexual behaviors (SSB) in free-ranging animals is an evolutionary puzzle because fitness benefits are often unclear in an evolutionary context. Moreover, the physiological and genetic underpinnings of SSB remain unclear. We exploited an extraordinary natural experiment to examine the impact of environmental factors (local sex ratio [SR]) and testosterone (T) levels on SSB in a dense population of Hermann's tortoises monitored for 7 years. Under the combination of high density and… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…Every captured individual was sexed when sexually dimorphic, aged, and permanently marked using a notche‐code on the marginal‐scutes (Cagle, ). In the course of recaptures, age was re‐estimated blindly (for error rate and more details on ageing and general CR methodology see Bonnet et al ., and Arsovski et al ., ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…Every captured individual was sexed when sexually dimorphic, aged, and permanently marked using a notche‐code on the marginal‐scutes (Cagle, ). In the course of recaptures, age was re‐estimated blindly (for error rate and more details on ageing and general CR methodology see Bonnet et al ., and Arsovski et al ., ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…In adult Hermann's tortoises sex‐specific survival is not common apart from few populations with a bias in sex‐ratio (Hailey & Willemsen, ). Interestingly, the Golem Grad tortoise population has the highest reported bias in sex‐ratio of this species, reaching its maximum on the Plateau where only 5% of all adult individuals are female (Bonnet et al ., ). Our best‐fit model implies significantly lower survival of younger females from this locality from birth (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Adult population density is estimated to be 4.2 tortoises/hectare J-M. B. and S. C. (unpublished data). This value is categorized as moderately high for French continental areas (Celse et al ., 2014) but is low compared with less impacted areas (Bonnet et al ., 2016b). This study site is relatively flat, with a mean elevation of 270 m (maximum 295 m).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Males are smaller than females; they achieve copulation through intensive harassment, and sometimes damage the female's cloacal region with their sharp horny tail (Hailey, 1990). In this species OSR is generally biased towards males (on average 1F/3.2M, N = 21 populations; reviewed by Bonnet et al, 2016). In Greek populations, harassment of females intensified with an increase in density of males while OSR was strongly male biased: 1F/6.7M.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%