Table 2.
Studies of the effects of sexual selection or sexual conflict on species richness.
| group | sexual selection measure studied | speciation effect | claim | authority |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| birds (passerines) | sexual dichromatism | increased species richness | sexual selection drives speciation | Barraclough et al. (1995, 1998) |
| sexual dichromatism | no effect | Price (1998) (part of same data set as above) | ||
| birds | mating system | increased species richness | sexual selection drives speciation | Mitra et al. (1996) |
| birds | ornamented versus non-ornamented | increased species richness | sexual selection drives speciation | Møller & Cuervo (1998) |
| birds | sexual dichromatism | increased species richness | sexual selection drives speciation | Owens et al. (1999) |
| sexual dimorphism | no effect | |||
| mating system | no effect | |||
| birds | sexual size dimorphism | no effect | increased speciation due to sexual conflict may be countered by increased extinction | Morrow et al. (2003a) |
| sexual dichromatism | no effect | |||
| testis size | no effect | |||
| insects: Coleoptera, Diptera, Ephemeroptera, Homoptera, Lepidoptera | monandry versus polyandry | increased species richness under polyandry | postcopulatory sexual conflict drives speciation | Arnqvist et al. (2000) |
| insects: Syrphidae (Diptera) | spermathecal width | increased species richness | postcopulatory sexual conflict drives speciation | Katzourakis et al. (2001) |
| testis length | increased species richness | |||
| insects: Papuan butterflies | sexual size dimorphism | no effect | species richness may arise through allopatry | Gage et al. (2002) |
| mating frequency | no effect | |||
| spiders | sexual size dimorphism | no effect | species richness may arise through allopatry | Gage et al. (2002) |
| mammals | sexual size dimorphism | no effect | species richness may arise through allopatry | Gage et al. (2002) |
| testis size | no effect | |||
| fish: Goodeinae | sexual size dimorphism | no effect | species richness may arise primarily through allopatry and ecological divergence | Ritchie et al. (2005) |