A biomechanical perspective on the use of forelimb length as a measure of sexual selection in frogs

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Abstract

Differences in forelimb length between male and female frogs and between amplexing and non‐amplexing males have been interpreted to be the results of sexual selection on forelimb length. The causal feature of the forelimb that has been posited to cause such selection is the observation that non‐amplexing males attempt to disrupt breeding by prying amplexing males from females. A biomechanical model of forelimb function suggests that total length per se may not be the most appropriate measure to use. There are more functionally significant aspects of forelimb morphology, such as lever arm lengths, that should influence amplexing ability and may make measures of overall forelimb length misleading. This example highlights the relevance of functional analysis to current questions in evolutionary biology that rely on postulated roles for morphological structures under selection. Copyright © 1991, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved

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Emerson, S. B. (1991). A biomechanical perspective on the use of forelimb length as a measure of sexual selection in frogs. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 4(4), 671–678. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1420-9101.1991.4040671.x

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