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When males live longer: Resource-driven territorial behavior drives sex-specific survival in snakes
Author(s) -
ChiYing Lee,
David A. Pike,
HuiYun Tseng,
Jung-Ya Hsu,
ShiangLin Huang,
PeiJen Lee Shaner,
Chen-Pan Liao,
Andrea Manica,
WenSan Huang
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aar5478
Subject(s) - territoriality , longevity , sea turtle , turtle (robot) , biology , aggression , ecology , demography , resource (disambiguation) , zoology , medicine , computer network , genetics , psychiatry , sociology , computer science
Phylogenetic analysis has shown that males' propensity to engage in aggressive encounters is associated with females having greater longevity. Here, we confirm the causal link between aggression and reduced longevity by looking at an egg-eating snake () in which females defend territories in the presence of sea turtle eggs. We monitored aggressiveness and survival at two sites: a control site with a stable supply of turtle eggs, and a second site where we collected data before and after a storm that eroded the beach on which turtles nested, thus leading to a loss of territoriality. We show that territoriality was the driver behind higher injury rates in females. Territorial females also had lower survival and decreased longevity compared with the nonterritorial males, but these differences disappeared when females were not territorial. Our study demonstrates how resource availability can influence the evolution of sex-specific patterns of survival across vertebrates.

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