“…Female choice of heavier males is adaptive, as females energetically benefit from consumption of the nutritious spermatophylax (Voigt et al ., , ; Lehmann & Lehmann, ). The development of larger wings, a longer stridulatory file and larger stridulatory teeth, however, might be constrained by several factors like the costs of sexually selected features (Simmons et al ., ; Podos & Patek, ), genetic covariance with other traits and the resources available during ontogenesis (Bonduriansky, ). Bushcricket males face high costs in producing the nuptial gift, which in P. ampliatus represents 20% of a male's body mass (Lehmann and Lehmann, unpublished data).…”