News Release

Why are male antlers and horns so large?

Roe deer antlers show who's the fittest

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Chicago Press Journals

Male Roe Deer

image: A male roe deer in hard antler. view more 

Credit: (photograph by Olivier Villa)

Why are male ungulate antlers and horns so large? Darwin, when proposing his theory of evolution and sexual selection, suggested that the size of male ungulate antlers and horns may reflect male individual quality, and thereby be used by conspecifics as an honest signal of male sexual vigor, health, strength, hierarchical status, or ability to fight. Researchers from five institutes in three European countries (CEFS-INRA, LBBE- CNRS , and ONCFS in France; Grimsö Wildlife Research Station in Sweden; and CEES in Norway) have investigated this issue for the first time in a territorial ungulate species, the European roe deer. In a paper published in the April issue of the American Naturalist, Cécile Vanpé and collaborators analyzed long-term data on antler size from three contrasting populations of roe deer (Bogesund in Sweden, and Chizé and Trois Fontaines in France). They demonstrated that antler size in males is indeed an honest signal of their individual quality as assessed by age and body mass.

Jean-Michel Gaillard comments, "Our results provide evidence that antler size of male roe deer mainly reflects their age and body mass, and is more resilient to variation in environmental conditions such as climate, food resources, and density." "Body mass and age are both reliable descriptors of individual quality in most vertebrates and have been shown to affect the ability to fight and the dominance of males. Hence, by choosing their sexual partners on the basis of their large antlers, females may thus ensure that they mate with a high quality mate," says Cécile Vanpé. Petter Kjellander adds, "Males may also use antler size of rival males as a cue to assess the possibility of winning a fight in order to control and monopolize more females for reproduction." Mark Hewison concludes, "This leads to the key question of whether males with larger antlers do have greater access to females than other males." According to François Klein, Guy Van Laere, and Daniel Delorme, this study clearly indicates that antler size might be used as an indicator of individual quality on which management rules could be based.

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Cécile Vanpé, Jean-Michel Gaillard, Petter Kjellander, Atle Mysterud, Pauline Magnien, Daniel Delorme, Guy Van Laere, François Klein, Olof Liberg, and A. J. Mark Hewison, "Antler size provides a honest signal of male phenotypic quality in roe deer" The American Naturalist, volume 169 (2007), pages 481–493

Founded in 1867, The American Naturalist is one of the world's most renowned, peer-reviewed publications in ecology, evolution, and population and integrative biology research. AN emphasizes sophisticated methodologies and innovative theoretical syntheses—all in an effort to advance the knowledge of organic evolution and other broad biological principles.


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