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Data from: Year-round sexual harassment as a behavioral mediator of vertebrate population dynamics

Data from: Year-round sexual harassment as a behavioral mediator of vertebrate population dynamics
Data from: Year-round sexual harassment as a behavioral mediator of vertebrate population dynamics
Within-species sexual segregation is a widespread phenomenon among vertebrates but its causes remain a topic of much debate. Female avoidance of male coercive mating attempts has the potential to influence the social structure of animal populations, yet it has been largely overlooked as a driver of sexual separation. Indeed, its potential role in long-term structuring of natural populations has not been studied. Here we use a comparative approach to examine the suitability of multiple hypotheses forwarded to account for sexual segregation (i.e. activity budget; predation risk; thermal niche - fecundity; and social factors) as drivers underlying sex-specific habitat use in a monomorphic model vertebrate, the small spotted catshark, Scyliorhinus canicula. Using this hypothesis-driven approach we show that year-round sexual habitat segregation in S. canicula can be accounted for directly by female avoidance of male sexual harassment. Long-term electronic tracking reveals sperm-storing female catsharks form daytime refuging aggregations in shallow water caves (~3.2 m water depth), and undertake nocturnal foraging excursions into deeper water (~25 m) most nights. In contrast, males occupy deeper, cooler habitat (~18 m) by day, and exploit a range of depths nocturnally (1 - 23 m). Males frequent the locations of shallow water female refuges, apparently intercepting females for mating when they emerge from, and return to, refuges on foraging excursions. Females partly compensate for higher metabolic costs incurred when refuging in warmer habitat by remaining inactive; however, egg production rates decline in the warmest months, but despite this, refuging behavior is not abandoned. Thermal choice experiments confirm individual females are willing to 'pay' in energy terms to avoid aggressive males and unsolicited male mating attempts. Long-term evasion of sexual harassment influences both the social structure and fecundity of the study population with females trading-off potential injury and unsolicited matings with longer term fitness. This identifies sexual harassment as a persistent cost to females that can mediate vertebrate population dynamics.,11-2052 dataMS Excel spreadsheet containing data obtained under natural (field) and controlled (laboratory) conditions. Individual S. canicula were electronically tracked in the natural environment, whilst in the laboratory the movements of individuals were tracked using video tracking techniques. Observations made under both natural and controlled conditions are also included. See manuscript materials and methods for further details.
DRYAD
Wearmouth, Victoria
1de41e9a-ba37-4044-9440-ea1af23150b0
Southall, Emily
0aa881e6-3e99-424f-bd6b-9720c1ab3c21
Morritt, David
4ff39847-0bb8-4650-9662-0454bf0a5e6f
Thompson, Richard C.
f439ea56-b6dd-48cf-8adb-d9c2ecc6e24d
Cuthill, Innes C.
db186624-b918-4bb6-8578-f67d9deb9b47
Partridge, Julian C.
37cd6a12-0085-479e-a111-8fcddb7cab53
Sims, David W.
7234b444-25e2-4bd5-8348-a1c142d0cf81
Partridge, Julian C.
37cd6a12-0085-479e-a111-8fcddb7cab53
Wearmouth, Victoria
1de41e9a-ba37-4044-9440-ea1af23150b0
Southall, Emily
0aa881e6-3e99-424f-bd6b-9720c1ab3c21
Morritt, David
4ff39847-0bb8-4650-9662-0454bf0a5e6f
Thompson, Richard C.
f439ea56-b6dd-48cf-8adb-d9c2ecc6e24d
Cuthill, Innes C.
db186624-b918-4bb6-8578-f67d9deb9b47
Partridge, Julian C.
37cd6a12-0085-479e-a111-8fcddb7cab53
Sims, David W.
7234b444-25e2-4bd5-8348-a1c142d0cf81
Partridge, Julian C.
37cd6a12-0085-479e-a111-8fcddb7cab53

(2012) Data from: Year-round sexual harassment as a behavioral mediator of vertebrate population dynamics. DRYAD doi:10.5061/dryad.5f4d8 [Dataset]

Record type: Dataset

Abstract

Within-species sexual segregation is a widespread phenomenon among vertebrates but its causes remain a topic of much debate. Female avoidance of male coercive mating attempts has the potential to influence the social structure of animal populations, yet it has been largely overlooked as a driver of sexual separation. Indeed, its potential role in long-term structuring of natural populations has not been studied. Here we use a comparative approach to examine the suitability of multiple hypotheses forwarded to account for sexual segregation (i.e. activity budget; predation risk; thermal niche - fecundity; and social factors) as drivers underlying sex-specific habitat use in a monomorphic model vertebrate, the small spotted catshark, Scyliorhinus canicula. Using this hypothesis-driven approach we show that year-round sexual habitat segregation in S. canicula can be accounted for directly by female avoidance of male sexual harassment. Long-term electronic tracking reveals sperm-storing female catsharks form daytime refuging aggregations in shallow water caves (~3.2 m water depth), and undertake nocturnal foraging excursions into deeper water (~25 m) most nights. In contrast, males occupy deeper, cooler habitat (~18 m) by day, and exploit a range of depths nocturnally (1 - 23 m). Males frequent the locations of shallow water female refuges, apparently intercepting females for mating when they emerge from, and return to, refuges on foraging excursions. Females partly compensate for higher metabolic costs incurred when refuging in warmer habitat by remaining inactive; however, egg production rates decline in the warmest months, but despite this, refuging behavior is not abandoned. Thermal choice experiments confirm individual females are willing to 'pay' in energy terms to avoid aggressive males and unsolicited male mating attempts. Long-term evasion of sexual harassment influences both the social structure and fecundity of the study population with females trading-off potential injury and unsolicited matings with longer term fitness. This identifies sexual harassment as a persistent cost to females that can mediate vertebrate population dynamics.,11-2052 dataMS Excel spreadsheet containing data obtained under natural (field) and controlled (laboratory) conditions. Individual S. canicula were electronically tracked in the natural environment, whilst in the laboratory the movements of individuals were tracked using video tracking techniques. Observations made under both natural and controlled conditions are also included. See manuscript materials and methods for further details.

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Published date: 2012

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 449013
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/449013
PURE UUID: b1a5c739-7ee2-4079-8569-077e8a1b60cb

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Date deposited: 13 May 2021 16:39
Last modified: 05 May 2023 18:13

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Contributors

Contributor: Victoria Wearmouth
Contributor: Emily Southall
Contributor: David Morritt
Contributor: Richard C. Thompson
Contributor: Innes C. Cuthill
Contributor: Julian C. Partridge
Contributor: David W. Sims
Contributor: Julian C. Partridge

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