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7 April 2021 Reversed Sexual Size Dimorphism in the Ryukyu Scops Owl Otus elegans on Minami-Daito Island
Akira Sawada, Tetsuya Iwasaki, Taro Matsuo, Kana Akatani, Masaoki Takagi
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Abstract

One of the consequences of selections acting on body size is the difference in body size between the sexes or sexual size dimorphism. Although many hypotheses have been proposed for reversed sexual size dimorphism (RSD) in raptors, ornithologists have rarely paid attention to temporal aspects of RSD when testing their hypotheses. Because selection pressures may vary temporally, describing temporal variation in RSD is a first step towards understanding evolutionary mechanism which shape and maintain the dimorphism. Here, we describe RSD in the population of Ryukyu Scops Owls Otus elegans on Minami-daito Island using a dataset of the external measurements of 770 individuals obtained during a 17-year long-term population monitoring project. Females were larger than males in body mass, culmen length, bill depth, bill width, tail length and flattened wing length, whereas males were larger than females in tarsus and head lengths. Among these traits, the degree and direction of RSD of body mass, tarsus length, bill depth and flattened wing length varied across years. There were neither increasing nor decreasing trends in RSD. This is a rare study which addressed temporal variation in RSD in a raptor species.

© The Ornithological Society of Japan 2021
Akira Sawada, Tetsuya Iwasaki, Taro Matsuo, Kana Akatani, and Masaoki Takagi "Reversed Sexual Size Dimorphism in the Ryukyu Scops Owl Otus elegans on Minami-Daito Island," Ornithological Science 20(1), 15-26, (7 April 2021). https://doi.org/10.2326/osj.20.15
Received: 9 December 2019; Accepted: 26 April 2020; Published: 7 April 2021
KEYWORDS
island
Otus elegans
raptor
Ryukyu Scops Owl
sexual size dimorphism
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