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Microsatellite DNA analysis shows that greater sage grouse leks are not kin groups
ROBERT M. GIBSON*, DEBRA PIRES, KATHLEEN S. DELANEY and ROBERT K. WAYNE
  *School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, NE 68588–0118, USA,   Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
Correspondence: Robert M. Gibson, Fax: 402 4722803; E-mail: rgibson2@unl.edu
Copyright © 2005 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
kinship • lek skew paradox • microsatellite analysis • sage grouse

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionMaterials and methodsResultsDiscussion

The spectacular social courtship displays of lekking birds are thought to evolve via sexual selection, but this view does not easily explain the participation of many males that apparently fail to mate. One of several proposed solutions to this 'lek skew paradox' is that kin selection favours low-ranking males joining leks to increase the fitness of closely related breeders. We investigated the potential for kin selection to operate in leks of the greater sage grouse, Centrocercus urophasianus, by estimating relatedness between lekking males using microsatellite DNA markers. We also calibrated these estimates using data from known families. Mean relatedness within leks was statistically indistinguishable from zero. We also found no evidence for local clustering of kin during lek display, although males tended to range closer to kin when off the lek. These results make kin selection an unlikely solution to the lek skew paradox in sage grouse. Together with other recent studies, they also raise the question of why kin selection apparently promotes social courtship in some lekking species, but not in others.


Received 27 June 2005; revision accepted 10 August 2005

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1365-294X.2005.02746.x About DOI

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Barcoding Life
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Special Issue on Barcoding Life

This supplement to Molecular Ecology Resources is devoted to showcasing current barcoding work and providing a forum for the discussion of issues dealing with barcoding. The supplement grew out of the second Canadian Barcode of Life Network Scientific Symposium devoted to DNA barcoding, held at the Royal Ontario Museum (Toronto, Canada, 28–29 April 2008).

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