[Odonata-l] Sexual dimorphism question?
Pilon, Michel
mipilon at nrcan.gc.ca
Mon Feb 5 18:12:37 PST 2007
Hello Carlo,
Excellent hypothesis! Better than the sexual one!!! I really adopt it! Do we know if male are more often eaten as prey than female? Male being eaten more often is of less consequence than female being eaten for the dragonfly prosperity! Maybe it can be another reason why male should be more visible to predators...
Thank you very much for this very clever hypothesis!!!
Michel
Quebec Canada
-----Message d'origine-----
De: odonata-l-bounces at listhost.ups.edu
A: Lista_Odonata_commenti
Date: 5/02/2007 5:04
Objet: Re: [Odonata-l] Sexual dimorphism question?
Hello Michael,
my hypothesis is that the sexual coloration dimorphism, at least in
Libellulids, has evolved in the predator-prey context and could be
explained
by the unprofitable prey model: by their colorful apparence, dragonfly
males
signal to (potential) (bird?) predators that it is no convenience to
attempt
to capture them. Dragonflies are in fact very good fliers and are quite
able
to escape capture by most birds. They are active during day hours in
open
habitats, often in full sunlight, and their coloration probably evolved
bright (aposematic) because it is easier for birds to learn a non-prey
item
by its bright coloration, thus promptly realising that it is not a good
job
of theirs to insist chasing such prey. On the other hand, a dull
coloration
makes females more protected (cryptic) in the shade of woods, where they
spend most of their time between oviposition bouts.
Greetings
Carlo Utzeri
----- Original Message -----
From: "Pilon, Michel" <mipilon at nrcan.gc.ca>
To: <odonata-l at listhost.ups.edu>
Sent: Sunday, February 04, 2007 10:10 PM
Subject: [Odonata-l] Sexual dimorphism question?
> Hello again,
>
> I hope I don't annoy all of you with my naive questions...
>
> After reading the answers about my id's request and considering that
in
> both case the sexual dimorphism is important, I would like to ask you
the
> following question which came to my mind:
>
> What justify that sexual dimorphism amongst dragonflies...?
>
> With birds we know that the female is attracted by the colorful male
and
> that she has to be duller because she has to lay over the eggs and
should
> not be seen by predators...
>
> Is it the same thing amongst Odonata? Does the female attracted by the
> male colors? And why usually are they duller than the male? (I'm
thinking
> also of Sympetrum obtrusum (white-faced Meadowhawk))
>
> Excuse-me again for my maybe so naive question...
>
> Michel Pilon
> Sherbrooke
> Quebec Canada
>
> Mes Parcours Nature:
> http://parcours.pilonm.org
>
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> Odonata-l at listhost.ups.edu
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