Rapid divergent evolution of internal female genitalia and the coevolution of male genital morphology revealed by micro-computed tomography

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Abstract

Animal genitalia are thought to evolve rapidly and divergently in response to sexual selection. Studies of genital evolution have focused largely on male genitalia. The paucity of work on female genital morphology is probably due to problems faced in quantifying shape variation, due to their composition and accessibility. Here we use a combination of micro-computed tomography, landmark free shape quantification and phylogenetic analysis to quantify the rate of female genital shape evolution among 29 species of Antichiropus millipedes, and their coevolution with male genitalia. We found significant variation in female and male genital shape among species. Male genital shape showed a stronger phylogenetic signal than female genital shape, although the phylogenetic signal effect sizes did not differ significantly. Male genital shape was found to be evolving 1.2 times faster than female genital shape. Female and male genital shape exhibited strong correlated evolution, indicating that genital shape changes in one sex are associated with corresponding changes in the genital shape of the other sex. This study adds novel insight into our growing understanding of how female genitalia can evolve rapidly and divergently, and highlights the advantages of three-dimensional techniques and multivariate analyses in studies of female genital evolution.

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Sloan, N. S., Harvey, M. S., Huey, J. A., & Simmons, L. W. (2024). Rapid divergent evolution of internal female genitalia and the coevolution of male genital morphology revealed by micro-computed tomography. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 291(2015). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2023.2883

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