One of the classic examples of an exaggerated sexually selected trait is the elaborate plumage that forms the train in male peafowl Pavo cristatus (peacock). Such ornaments are thought to reduce locomotor performance as a result of their weight and aerodynamic drag, but this cost is unknown. Here, the effect that the train has on take-off flight in peacocks was quantified as the sum of the rates of change of the potential and kinetic energies of the body (P CoM ) in birds with trains and following the train's removal. There was no significant difference between P CoM in birds with and without a train. The train incurs drag during take-off; however, while this produces a twofold increase in parasite drag, parasite power only accounts for 0.1% of the total aerodynamic power. The train represented 6.9% of body weight and is expected to increase induced power. The absence of a detectable effect on take-off performance does not necessarily mean that there is no cost associated with possessing such ornate plumage; rather, it suggests that given the variation in take-off performance per se, the magnitude of any effect of the train has little meaningful functional relevance.
KEY WORDS: Sexual selection, Pavo cristatus, Flight, Peafowl, Take-off, Performance
INTRODUCTIONSexual selection may favour the evolution of extravagant secondary sexual characteristics that are important in mate choice and confer reproductive benefits (Darwin, 1871). There are several theories about the origin and maintenance of such sexual traits, but central to 'handicap' and 'good genes' models of sexual selection is the assumption that such ornaments incur a cost (Zahavi, 1975;Andersson, 1994). It is hypothesised that exaggerated sexually selected traits negatively affect organismal performance (e.g. endurance or escape response) by directly (e.g. through increased predation risk) or indirectly (e.g. through increased metabolic energy expenditure) incurring costs (Kotiaho, 2001). However, while the sexual trait has a negative affect on organismal performance, it is an indicator of overall superior genetic quality and therefore has a net positive effect on fitness [e.g. fecundity or offspring success (Petrie, 1994;Rowe and Houle, 1996;Möller and Alatalo, 1999;Hale et al., 2009;Husak and Swallow, 2011)]. Examples of such traits are found throughout nature, and include the ornate plumage exhibited in the males of some bird species [e.g. long-tailed widowbirds, Euplectes sp. (Andersson, 1982); peafowl, Pavo sp. (Petrie, 1994); and paradise whydas, Vidua sp. (Alatalo et al., 1988)]. It has been suggested that these structures may impair flight performance (Balmford et al., 1993). However, empirical evidence quantifying the costs associated with sexually selected traits is generally lacking (Kotiaho, 2001). Demonstrating whether sexually selected traits do
RESEARCH ARTICLEFaculty of Biological Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK. incur a cost is necessary to test current theories in evolutionary biology.Arguably one of the most i...