<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"></SPAN> PART II.<br/> SEXUAL SELECTION.</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"></SPAN> CHAPTER VIII.<br/> PRINCIPLES OF SEXUAL SELECTION.</h2>
<p class="letter">
Secondary sexual characters—Sexual selection—Manner of
action—Excess of males—Polygamy—The male alone generally
modified through sexual selection—Eagerness of the male—Variability
of the male—Choice exerted by the female—Sexual compared with
natural selection—Inheritance, at corresponding periods of life, at
corresponding seasons of the year, and as limited by sex—Relations
between the several forms of inheritance—Causes why one sex and the young
are not modified through sexual selection—Supplement on the proportional
numbers of the two sexes throughout the animal kingdom—The proportion of
the sexes in relation to natural selection.</p>
<p>With animals which have their sexes separated, the males necessarily differ
from the females in their organs of reproduction; and these are the primary
sexual characters. But the sexes often differ in what Hunter has called
secondary sexual characters, which are not directly connected with the act of
reproduction; for instance, the male possesses certain organs of sense or
locomotion, of which the female is quite destitute, or has them more
highly-developed, in order that he may readily find or reach her; or again the
male has special organs of prehension for holding her securely. These latter
organs, of infinitely diversified kinds, graduate into those which are commonly
ranked as primary, and in some cases can hardly be distinguished from them; we
see instances of this in the complex appendages at the apex of the abdomen in
male insects. Unless indeed we confine the term “primary” to the
reproductive glands, it is scarcely possible to decide which ought to be called
primary and which secondary.</p>
<p>The female often differs from the male in having organs for the nourishment or
protection of her young, such as the mammary glands of mammals, and the
abdominal sacks of the marsupials. In some few cases also the male possesses
similar organs, which are wanting in the female, such as the receptacles for
the ova in certain male fishes, and those temporarily developed in certain male
frogs. The females of most bees are provided with a special apparatus for
collecting and carrying pollen, and their ovipositor is modified into a sting
for the defence of the larvae and the community. Many similar cases could be
given, but they do not here concern us. There are, however, other sexual
differences quite unconnected with the primary reproductive organs, and it is
with these that we are more especially concerned—such as the greater
size, strength, and pugnacity of the male, his weapons of offence or means of
defence against rivals, his gaudy colouring and various ornaments, his power of
song, and other such characters.</p>
<p>Besides the primary and secondary sexual differences, such as the foregoing,
the males and females of some animals differ in structures related to different
habits of life, and not at all, or only indirectly, to the reproductive
functions. Thus the females of certain flies (Culicidae and Tabanidae) are
blood-suckers, whilst the males, living on flowers, have mouths destitute of
mandibles. (1. Westwood, ‘Modern Classification of Insects,’ vol.
ii. 1840, p. 541. For the statement about Tanais, mentioned below, I am
indebted to Fritz Muller.) The males of certain moths and of some crustaceans
(e.g. Tanais) have imperfect, closed mouths, and cannot feed. The complemental
males of certain Cirripedes live like epiphytic plants either on the female or
the hermaphrodite form, and are destitute of a mouth and of prehensile limbs.
In these cases it is the male which has been modified, and has lost certain
important organs, which the females possess. In other cases it is the female
which has lost such parts; for instance, the female glow-worm is destitute of
wings, as also are many female moths, some of which never leave their cocoons.
Many female parasitic crustaceans have lost their natatory legs. In some
weevil-beetles (Curculionidae) there is a great difference between the male and
female in the length of the rostrum or snout (2. Kirby and Spence,
‘Introduction to Entomology,’ vol. iii. 1826, p. 309.); but the
meaning of this and of many analogous differences, is not at all understood.
Differences of structure between the two sexes in relation to different habits
of life are generally confined to the lower animals; but with some few birds
the beak of the male differs from that of the female. In the Huia of New
Zealand the difference is wonderfully great, and we hear from Dr. Buller (3.
‘Birds of New Zealand,’ 1872, p. 66.) that the male uses his strong
beak in chiselling the larvae of insects out of decayed wood, whilst the female
probes the softer parts with her far longer, much curved and pliant beak: and
thus they mutually aid each other. In most cases, differences of structure
between the sexes are more or less directly connected with the propagation of
the species: thus a female, which has to nourish a multitude of ova, requires
more food than the male, and consequently requires special means for procuring
it. A male animal, which lives for a very short time, might lose its organs for
procuring food through disuse, without detriment; but he would retain his
locomotive organs in a perfect state, so that he might reach the female. The
female, on the other hand, might safely lose her organs for flying, swimming,
or walking, if she gradually acquired habits which rendered such powers
useless.</p>
<p>We are, however, here concerned only with sexual selection. This depends on the
advantage which certain individuals have over others of the same sex and
species solely in respect of reproduction. When, as in the cases above
mentioned, the two sexes differ in structure in relation to different habits of
life, they have no doubt been modified through natural selection, and by
inheritance limited to one and the same sex. So again the primary sexual
organs, and those for nourishing or protecting the young, come under the same
influence; for those individuals which generated or nourished their offspring
best, would leave, ceteris paribus, the greatest number to inherit their
superiority; whilst those which generated or nourished their offspring badly,
would leave but few to inherit their weaker powers. As the male has to find the
female, he requires organs of sense and locomotion, but if these organs are
necessary for the other purposes of life, as is generally the case, they will
have been developed through natural selection. When the male has found the
female, he sometimes absolutely requires prehensile organs to hold her; thus
Dr. Wallace informs me that the males of certain moths cannot unite with the
females if their tarsi or feet are broken. The males of many oceanic
crustaceans, when adult, have their legs and antennae modified in an
extraordinary manner for the prehension of the female; hence we may suspect
that it is because these animals are washed about by the waves of the open sea,
that they require these organs in order to propagate their kind, and if so,
their development has been the result of ordinary or natural selection. Some
animals extremely low in the scale have been modified for this same purpose;
thus the males of certain parasitic worms, when fully grown, have the lower
surface of the terminal part of their bodies roughened like a rasp, and with
this they coil round and permanently hold the females. (4. M. Perrier advances
this case (‘Revue Scientifique,’ Feb. 1, 1873, p. 865) as one fatal
to the belief in sexual election, inasmuch as he supposes that I attribute all
the differences between the sexes to sexual selection. This distinguished
naturalist, therefore, like so many other Frenchmen, has not taken the trouble
to understand even the first principles of sexual selection. An English
naturalist insists that the claspers of certain male animals could not have
been developed through the choice of the female! Had I not met with this
remark, I should not have thought it possible for any one to have read this
chapter and to have imagined that I maintain that the choice of the female had
anything to do with the development of the prehensile organs in the male.)</p>
<p>When the two sexes follow exactly the same habits of life, and the male has the
sensory or locomotive organs more highly developed than those of the female, it
may be that the perfection of these is indispensable to the male for finding
the female; but in the vast majority of cases, they serve only to give one male
an advantage over another, for with sufficient time, the less well-endowed
males would succeed in pairing with the females; and judging from the structure
of the female, they would be in all other respects equally well adapted for
their ordinary habits of life. Since in such cases the males have acquired
their present structure, not from being better fitted to survive in the
struggle for existence, but from having gained an advantage over other males,
and from having transmitted this advantage to their male offspring alone,
sexual selection must here have come into action. It was the importance of this
distinction which led me to designate this form of selection as Sexual
Selection. So again, if the chief service rendered to the male by his
prehensile organs is to prevent the escape of the female before the arrival of
other males, or when assaulted by them, these organs will have been perfected
through sexual selection, that is by the advantage acquired by certain
individuals over their rivals. But in most cases of this kind it is impossible
to distinguish between the effects of natural and sexual selection. Whole
chapters could be filled with details on the differences between the sexes in
their sensory, locomotive, and prehensile organs. As, however, these structures
are not more interesting than others adapted for the ordinary purposes of life
I shall pass them over almost entirely, giving only a few instances under each
class.</p>
<p>There are many other structures and instincts which must have been developed
through sexual selection—such as the weapons of offence and the means of
defence of the males for fighting with and driving away their
rivals—their courage and pugnacity—their various
ornaments—their contrivances for producing vocal or instrumental
music—and their glands for emitting odours, most of these latter
structures serving only to allure or excite the female. It is clear that these
characters are the result of sexual and not of ordinary selection, since
unarmed, unornamented, or unattractive males would succeed equally well in the
battle for life and in leaving a numerous progeny, but for the presence of
better endowed males. We may infer that this would be the case, because the
females, which are unarmed and unornamented, are able to survive and procreate
their kind. Secondary sexual characters of the kind just referred to, will be
fully discussed in the following chapters, as being in many respects
interesting, but especially as depending on the will, choice, and rivalry of
the individuals of either sex. When we behold two males fighting for the
possession of the female, or several male birds displaying their gorgeous
plumage, and performing strange antics before an assembled body of females, we
cannot doubt that, though led by instinct, they know what they are about, and
consciously exert their mental and bodily powers.</p>
<p>Just as man can improve the breeds of his game-cocks by the selection of those
birds which are victorious in the cockpit, so it appears that the strongest and
most vigorous males, or those provided with the best weapons, have prevailed
under nature, and have led to the improvement of the natural breed or species.
A slight degree of variability leading to some advantage, however slight, in
reiterated deadly contests would suffice for the work of sexual selection; and
it is certain that secondary sexual characters are eminently variable. Just as
man can give beauty, according to his standard of taste, to his male poultry,
or more strictly can modify the beauty originally acquired by the parent
species, can give to the Sebright bantam a new and elegant plumage, an erect
and peculiar carriage—so it appears that female birds in a state of
nature, have by a long selection of the more attractive males, added to their
beauty or other attractive qualities. No doubt this implies powers of
discrimination and taste on the part of the female which will at first appear
extremely improbable; but by the facts to be adduced hereafter, I hope to be
able to shew that the females actually have these powers. When, however, it is
said that the lower animals have a sense of beauty, it must not be supposed
that such sense is comparable with that of a cultivated man, with his multiform
and complex associated ideas. A more just comparison would be between the taste
for the beautiful in animals, and that in the lowest savages, who admire and
deck themselves with any brilliant, glittering, or curious object.</p>
<p>From our ignorance on several points, the precise manner in which sexual
selection acts is somewhat uncertain. Nevertheless if those naturalists who
already believe in the mutability of species, will read the following chapters,
they will, I think, agree with me, that sexual selection has played an
important part in the history of the organic world. It is certain that amongst
almost all animals there is a struggle between the males for the possession of
the female. This fact is so notorious that it would be superfluous to give
instances. Hence the females have the opportunity of selecting one out of
several males, on the supposition that their mental capacity suffices for the
exertion of a choice. In many cases special circumstances tend to make the
struggle between the males particularly severe. Thus the males of our migratory
birds generally arrive at their places of breeding before the females, so that
many males are ready to contend for each female. I am informed by Mr. Jenner
Weir, that the bird-catchers assert that this is invariably the case with the
nightingale and blackcap, and with respect to the latter he can himself confirm
the statement.</p>
<p>Mr. Swaysland of Brighton has been in the habit, during the last forty years,
of catching our migratory birds on their first arrival, and he has never known
the females of any species to arrive before their males. During one spring he
shot thirty-nine males of Ray’s wagtail (Budytes Raii) before he saw a
single female. Mr. Gould has ascertained by the dissection of those snipes
which arrive the first in this country, that the males come before the females.
And the like holds good with most of the migratory birds of the United States.
(5. J.A. Allen, on the ‘Mammals and Winter Birds of Florida,’
Bulletin of Comparative Zoology, Harvard College, p. 268.) The majority of the
male salmon in our rivers, on coming up from the sea, are ready to breed before
the females. So it appears to be with frogs and toads. Throughout the great
class of insects the males almost always are the first to emerge from the pupal
state, so that they generally abound for a time before any females can be seen.
(6. Even with those plants in which the sexes are separate, the male flowers
are generally mature before the female. As first shewn by C.K. Sprengel, many
hermaphrodite plants are dichogamous; that is, their male and female organs are
not ready at the same time, so that they cannot be self-fertilised. Now in such
flowers, the pollen is in general matured before the stigma, though there are
exceptional cases in which the female organs are beforehand.) The cause of this
difference between the males and females in their periods of arrival and
maturity is sufficiently obvious. Those males which annually first migrated
into any country, or which in the spring were first ready to breed, or were the
most eager, would leave the largest number of offspring; and these would tend
to inherit similar instincts and constitutions. It must be borne in mind that
it would have been impossible to change very materially the time of sexual
maturity in the females, without at the same time interfering with the period
of the production of the young—a period which must be determined by the
seasons of the year. On the whole there can be no doubt that with almost all
animals, in which the sexes are separate, there is a constantly recurrent
struggle between the males for the possession of the females.</p>
<p>Our difficulty in regard to sexual selection lies in understanding how it is
that the males which conquer other males, or those which prove the most
attractive to the females, leave a greater number of offspring to inherit their
superiority than their beaten and less attractive rivals. Unless this result
does follow, the characters which give to certain males an advantage over
others, could not be perfected and augmented through sexual selection. When the
sexes exist in exactly equal numbers, the worst-endowed males will (except
where polygamy prevails), ultimately find females, and leave as many offspring,
as well fitted for their general habits of life, as the best-endowed males.
From various facts and considerations, I formerly inferred that with most
animals, in which secondary sexual characters are well developed, the males
considerably exceeded the females in number; but this is not by any means
always true. If the males were to the females as two to one, or as three to
two, or even in a somewhat lower ratio, the whole affair would be simple; for
the better-armed or more attractive males would leave the largest number of
offspring. But after investigating, as far as possible, the numerical
proportion of the sexes, I do not believe that any great inequality in number
commonly exists. In most cases sexual selection appears to have been effective
in the following manner.</p>
<p>Let us take any species, a bird for instance, and divide the females inhabiting
a district into two equal bodies, the one consisting of the more vigorous and
better-nourished individuals, and the other of the less vigorous and healthy.
The former, there can be little doubt, would be ready to breed in the spring
before the others; and this is the opinion of Mr. Jenner Weir, who has
carefully attended to the habits of birds during many years. There can also be
no doubt that the most vigorous, best-nourished and earliest breeders would on
an average succeed in rearing the largest number of fine offspring. (7. Here is
excellent evidence on the character of the offspring from an experienced
ornithologist. Mr. J.A. Allen, in speaking (‘Mammals and Winter Birds of
E. Florida,’ p. 229) of the later broods, after the accidental
destruction of the first, says, that these “are found to be smaller and
paler-coloured than those hatched earlier in the season. In cases where several
broods are reared each year, as a general rule the birds of the earlier broods
seem in all respects the most perfect and vigorous.”) The males, as we
have seen, are generally ready to breed before the females; the strongest, and
with some species the best armed of the males, drive away the weaker; and the
former would then unite with the more vigorous and better-nourished females,
because they are the first to breed. (8. Hermann Müller has come to this same
conclusion with respect to those female bees which are the first to emerge from
the pupa each year. See his remarkable essay, ‘Anwendung der
Darwin’schen Lehre auf Bienen,’ ‘Verh. d. V. Jahrg.’
xxix. p. 45.) Such vigorous pairs would surely rear a larger number of
offspring than the retarded females, which would be compelled to unite with the
conquered and less powerful males, supposing the sexes to be numerically equal;
and this is all that is wanted to add, in the course of successive generations,
to the size, strength and courage of the males, or to improve their weapons.</p>
<p>But in very many cases the males which conquer their rivals, do not obtain
possession of the females, independently of the choice of the latter. The
courtship of animals is by no means so simple and short an affair as might be
thought. The females are most excited by, or prefer pairing with, the more
ornamented males, or those which are the best songsters, or play the best
antics; but it is obviously probable that they would at the same time prefer
the more vigorous and lively males, and this has in some cases been confirmed
by actual observation. (9. With respect to poultry, I have received
information, hereafter to be given, to this effect. Even with birds, such as
pigeons, which pair for life, the female, as I hear from Mr. Jenner Weir, will
desert her mate if he is injured or grows weak.) Thus the more vigorous
females, which are the first to breed, will have the choice of many males; and
though they may not always select the strongest or best armed, they will select
those which are vigorous and well armed, and in other respects the most
attractive. Both sexes, therefore, of such early pairs would as above
explained, have an advantage over others in rearing offspring; and this
apparently has sufficed during a long course of generations to add not only to
the strength and fighting powers of the males, but likewise to their various
ornaments or other attractions.</p>
<p>In the converse and much rarer case of the males selecting particular females,
it is plain that those which were the most vigorous and had conquered others,
would have the freest choice; and it is almost certain that they would select
vigorous as well as attractive females. Such pairs would have an advantage in
rearing offspring, more especially if the male had the power to defend the
female during the pairing-season as occurs with some of the higher animals, or
aided her in providing for the young. The same principles would apply if each
sex preferred and selected certain individuals of the opposite sex; supposing
that they selected not only the more attractive, but likewise the more vigorous
individuals.</p>
<h3>NUMERICAL PROPORTION OF THE TWO SEXES.</h3>
<p>I have remarked that sexual selection would be a simple affair if the males
were considerably more numerous than the females. Hence I was led to
investigate, as far as I could, the proportions between the two sexes of as
many animals as possible; but the materials are scanty. I will here give only a
brief abstract of the results, retaining the details for a supplementary
discussion, so as not to interfere with the course of my argument. Domesticated
animals alone afford the means of ascertaining the proportional numbers at
birth; but no records have been specially kept for this purpose. By indirect
means, however, I have collected a considerable body of statistics, from which
it appears that with most of our domestic animals the sexes are nearly equal at
birth. Thus 25,560 births of race-horses have been recorded during twenty-one
years, and the male births were to the female births as 99.7 to 100. In
greyhounds the inequality is greater than with any other animal, for out of
6878 births during twelve years, the male births were to the female as 110.1 to
100. It is, however, in some degree doubtful whether it is safe to infer that
the proportion would be the same under natural conditions as under
domestication; for slight and unknown differences in the conditions affect the
proportion of the sexes. Thus with mankind, the male births in England are as
104.5, in Russia as 108.9, and with the Jews of Livonia as 120, to 100 female
births. But I shall recur to this curious point of the excess of male births in
the supplement to this chapter. At the Cape of Good Hope, however, male
children of European extraction have been born during several years in the
proportion of between 90 and 99 to 100 female children.</p>
<p>For our present purpose we are concerned with the proportions of the sexes, not
only at birth, but also at maturity, and this adds another element of doubt;
for it is a well-ascertained fact that with man the number of males dying
before or during birth, and during the first two years of infancy, is
considerably larger than that of females. So it almost certainly is with male
lambs, and probably with some other animals. The males of some species kill one
another by fighting; or they drive one another about until they become greatly
emaciated. They must also be often exposed to various dangers, whilst wandering
about in eager search for the females. In many kinds of fish the males are much
smaller than the females, and they are believed often to be devoured by the
latter, or by other fishes. The females of some birds appear to die earlier
than the males; they are also liable to be destroyed on their nests, or whilst
in charge of their young. With insects the female larvae are often larger than
those of the males, and would consequently be more likely to be devoured. In
some cases the mature females are less active and less rapid in their movements
than the males, and could not escape so well from danger. Hence, with animals
in a state of nature, we must rely on mere estimation, in order to judge of the
proportions of the sexes at maturity; and this is but little trustworthy,
except when the inequality is strongly marked. Nevertheless, as far as a
judgment can be formed, we may conclude from the facts given in the supplement,
that the males of some few mammals, of many birds, of some fish and insects,
are considerably more numerous than the females.</p>
<p>The proportion between the sexes fluctuates slightly during successive years:
thus with race-horses, for every 100 mares born the stallions varied from 107.1
in one year to 92.6 in another year, and with greyhounds from 116.3 to 95.3.
But had larger numbers been tabulated throughout an area more extensive than
England, these fluctuations would probably have disappeared; and such as they
are, would hardly suffice to lead to effective sexual selection in a state of
nature. Nevertheless, in the cases of some few wild animals, as shewn in the
supplement, the proportions seem to fluctuate either during different seasons
or in different localities in a sufficient degree to lead to such selection.
For it should be observed that any advantage, gained during certain years or in
certain localities by those males which were able to conquer their rivals, or
were the most attractive to the females, would probably be transmitted to the
offspring, and would not subsequently be eliminated. During the succeeding
seasons, when, from the equality of the sexes, every male was able to procure a
female, the stronger or more attractive males previously produced would still
have at least as good a chance of leaving offspring as the weaker or less
attractive.</p>
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