Rapid and divergent evolution of male genitalia represents one
of the
most general evolutionary
patterns in animals with internal fertilization, but the causes of
this evolutionary trend are poorly
understood. Several hypotheses have been proposed to account for genitalic
evolution, most
prominent of which are the lock-and-key, sexual selection and pleiotropy
hypotheses. However,
insights into the evolutionary mechanisms of genitalic evolution are
hindered by a lack of relevant
in-depth studies of genital morphology. We used a biparental progenies
breeding design to study
the effects of food stress during ontogeny on phenotypic expression
of a suite of genital and non-genital morphological traits, both linear
traits and
multivariate shape indices, in a natural
population of the water strider Gerris incognitus. In general,
genitalic traits were as variable as
non-genital traits, both phenotypically and genotypically. Average narrow-sense
heritability of
genital traits was 0·47 (SE=0·05). Further, while food
stress during development had a large
impact on adult morphology, and expression of genitalic traits exhibited
significant levels of
condition dependence, different genotypes did not significantly
differ in their ability to cope with
food stress. Genitalic conformation was also both phenotypically
and genetically correlated with
general morphological traits. These patterns are in disagreement
with certain predictions generated
by the long-standing lock-and-key hypothesis, but are in general agreement
with several other
hypotheses of genital evolution. We failed to find any additive
genetic components in fluctuating
asymmetry of any bilaterally symmetrical traits and the effects on
fluctuating asymmetry of food
stress during development were very low and insignificant. Some methodological
implications of
our study are discussed, such as the bias introduced by the
non-negativity constraint in restricted
maximum likelihood estimation of variance components.