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Krishna: It’s a myth that male animals are usually larger than females according to a new study*.

The study found that, in many mammal species, males are not larger than females. In fact, in a comparison of 429 species in the wild, 50 per cent of species including rodents and some bats — which make up a large proportion of all mammal species — showed no difference in body size between the sexes. Male-biased size dimorphism (where males are larger than females) was found in only 28 per cent of mammal species.

If you are shown a group of house rats ( 'mischief' of rats ), you cannot differentiate between males and females superficially : Image source: google

So, why do a lot of people have a misconception that males are normally larger than females?

Anisogamy is the term used to describe the difference in sex cells — small, numerous, sperm, compared to relatively large eggs. Males can produce sperm throughout most of their lifespan, whereas females are born with a finite number of eggs. Therefore, females (or rather, their eggs), are a scare resource for which males compete for access. Generally, in species where females are a limited resource that males need to fight over, males are larger than females.

Dimorphism ( Source of Images : Google)

In terms of evolution, most males have been shaped to be larger, bolder, heavier, more adorned and have more weaponry than females. This is due to males fighting to acquire females — a larger stag with bigger antlers would do much better in a fight, known as a rut, than a small stag with tiny antlers. So, bigger usually wins.

This includes animals such as lions and baboons, where size is an advantage when competing physically for mates. Male northern elephant seals, who fight for access to harems of females, show the largest male-biased size dimorphism, being over 3.2 times heavier than females. These are the animals that tend to attract research.

But, what happens in species where males don’t fight for access to females? Generally, females are larger than males. This is because larger females usually produce more offspring.

This new study noted that larger female rabbits usually have multiple litters each mating season. Being a larger female is much more advantageous in terms of reproductive success. But more so when offspring do not need extended parental care and when gestation periods are short.

Large female rabbit ( Source: Wikipedia)

The most extreme sexual size dimorphism is found outside of mammals.

Cichlid fish (Lamprologus callipterus) males are up to 60 times larger than females. The males protect empty snail shells for the females to breed in. Larger females can produce more offspring but they need larger shells and therefore a larger male to defend those shells.

In mammals, the largest female-biased size dimorphism** is found in peninsular tube-nosed bats, where females are 1.4 times the size of males. However, more dimorphism in body size is seen in fish, reptiles and insects.

Tube-nosed bat ( Image source: national geographic)

For example, the female orb-weaving spider (Nephila plumipes) has a much larger body size than the male, reaching up to ten times his size. Size dimorphism also shows a correlation with cannibalism, where larger females are more likely to eat their male partner.

Why isn’t sexual size dimorphism seen in more mammals?

Mammals tend to have fewer offspring than other species such as fish or spiders. They only have a few offspring at a time and often have long gestation periods or extended periods of parental care.

In addition, the majority of mammals are monogamous, so there is less need for males to fight over females. That’s why animals such as lemurs, golden moles, horses, zebra and tenrecs, usually have similar sized males and females.

It is thought that biases in the scientific literature may have led to the misconception that males are normally bigger as research historically focused on species considered “charismatic”, such as primates and carnivores, that attract funding. These are some of the few mammalian species where males compete for mates and so gain an evolutionary advantage if they are larger.

There was also a bias of male scientists conducting research. And, although a study in 1977 by a female scientist found that species with little sexual size dimorphism were frequent in mammals, the research was drowned out by studies on charismatic species with a bias towards large males. Perhaps if there had been more female scientists at the time, we might have had a different preconception about body size in the animal kingdom ***.

This answer is a myth buster!

Footnotes:

*New estimates indicate that males are not larger than females in mo...

**The term dimorphism denotes a trait that occurs in two distinct forms or morphs within a given species and traits that differ consistently between males and females are sexual dimorphisms.

***It’s a myth that male animals are usually larger than females – new...

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Replies to This Discussion

22

The rats shown in the pic are ship rats or house rats, where the difference is less marked. In brown/Norway rats (the type we usually keep as pets) males are up to twice as large as females.

Yes, selective breeding of the brown rat has produced the fancy rat (rats kept as pets), as well as the laboratory rat (rats used as model organisms in biological research). Both fancy rats and laboratory rats are of the domesticated subspecies Rattus norvegicus domestica. Studies of wild rats in New York City have shown that populations living in different neighbourhoods can evolve distinct genomic profiles over time, by slowly accruing different traits.

The many different types of domesticated brown rats include variations in coat patterns, as well as the style of the coat, such as Hairless or Rex, and more recently developed variations in body size and structure, including dwarf and tailless fancy rats.

Yes, males are generally larger than females in this subspecies. Exceptions occur but they are not the norm. And domestication and sometimes selective breeding change the equation.

Bender, Eric (21 March 2022). "Urban evolution: How species adapt to survive in cities"Knowable Magazine. Annual Reviews. doi:10.1146/knowable-031822-1

Combs, Matthew; Puckett, Emily E.; Richardson, Jonathan; Mims, Destiny; Munshi‐South, Jason (12 December 2017). "Spatial population genomics of the brown rat ( Rattus norvegicus ) in New York City"Molecular Ecology27 (1): 83–98. doi:10.1111/mec.14437ISSN 0962-1083PMID 29165929S2CID 13739507

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