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belgareth
01-24-2006, 05:59 AM
I wonder if this also relates to us humans? :run:






Size Does Matter in Bats' Evolution By WILLIAM KATES, Associated Press Writer


Tue Jan 24, 2006





SYRACUSE, N.Y. - For some male bats, sexual prowess comes with a

price — smaller brains. A research team led by Syracuse University biologist Scott Pitnick found that in bat species

where the females are promiscuous, the males boasting the largest testicles also had the smallest brains.

Conversely, where the females were faithful, the males had smaller testes and larger brains.



"It turns out size does matter," said Pitnick, whose findings were

published in December in "Proceedings of the Royal Society: Biological Science," an online

journal.

The study offers evidence that males — at least in some

species — make an evolutionary trade-off between intelligence and sexual prowess, said David Hoskens, a biologist at

the Centre for Ecology and Conservation at the University of Exeter in England and a leading authority on bats'

mating behavior.

"Bats invest an enormous amount in testis, and the

investment has to come from somewhere. There are no free lunches," said Hoskens, who did not participate in the

study.

The relationship between the breeding system and relative

brain size has received little investigation, said Pitnick, who teaches evolution and population biology and

researches topics such as sexual selection and sexual conflict.

Bats

are the second largest group of mammals (behind rodents) with about 1,000 known species. Because of their

exceptional navigational and flying abilities, bats have been the subject of countless studies, providing Pitnick

and his colleagues — Kate Jones of Columbia University and Gerald Wilkinson of the University of Maryland — with a

bounty of data without having to slink off into caves.

Pitnick's

team looked at 334 species of bats and found a convincing contrast in testes size. In species with monogamous

females, males had testes starting at 0.11 percent of their body weight and ranging up to 1.4 percent. But in

species where the females had a large number of mates, Pitnick found testes ranged from 0.6 percent to 8.5 percent

of the males' mass (in the Rafinesque's big-eared bat).

"If female

bats mate with more than one male, a sperm competition begins," Pitnick said. "The male who ejaculates the greatest

number of sperm wins the game, and hence many bats have evolved outrageously big

testes."

Promiscuity is known to make a difference in testicle size

in some other mammals. For example, chimpanzees are promiscuous and have testicles that are many times larger than

those of gorillas, in which a single dominant male has exclusive access to a harem of

females.

Large brains, meanwhile, are metabolically costly to develop

and maintain. Pitnick's research suggested that in those bat species with promiscuous females, the male's body

used more of its energy to enhance the testes — giving it the greater adaptive advantage — and lacked the energy it

needed to further develop the brain.

The study found that in more

monogamous species, the average male brain size was about 2.6 percent of body weight, while in promiscuous species,

the average size dipped to 1.9 percent.





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Icehawk
01-24-2006, 09:39 AM
Quantity vs quality debate

again?:think:

belgareth
01-24-2006, 10:13 AM
Just amused, more than

anything. It was hard to choose between putting it here or in humor.

a.k.a.
01-29-2006, 11:03 PM
Large brains, meanwhile, are metabolically costly to develop and

maintain.


Don’t most bats eat insects?
Hopefully the fact that

humans are omnivores and our ancestors hunted big game allows us to be both promiscuous AND intelligent. (Although

not necessarily at the same time.)

belgareth
01-30-2006, 04:53 AM
I don't know that much about

bats but imagine insects are pretty high in energy, mostly protien. At least that's what they teach in survival

courses. It was an amusing article. I have no idea if there is any relationship with man's behavoirs.