with those males with the greatest ornamentation,
ensuring that their own male offspring receive the
genes for the maximum showy horns and bright
colors, and that the pageant continues.
The situation in Chalcosoma is a classic example
of sexual selection, where a characteristic with no
obvious value for survival—in fact with negative
survival cost, as it is expensive to produce in terms
of resources, and makes the bearer less agile, more
conspicuous, and at greater risk of predation—is
maintained and enhanced because its possessors
are, seemingly arbitrarily, more appropriate mates.
Sexual selection is at odds with regular natural
selection, in this case the former driving the
extreme adaptations of the male; the latter
favoring the camouflaged, secretive, unadorned
female as a better survival strategy. Parallel
situations exist with the tails of peacocks and
some pheasants, or the antlers of deer, or, some
might add, certain expensive sports cars.
The adoption of extreme structures via sexual
selection appears throughout the Coleoptera but
is most obvious in the Scarabaeoidea, and it is not
necessary to go to tropical Asia to observe this.
Stag beetles (Lucanidae) in gardens and yards in
Europe and North America demonstrate the same
effect. Not all extreme modifications result from
sexual selection. The huge, fanlike antennae of
some Elateroidea serve a practical function, to sift
the air for minute quantities of target chemicals.
The huge hind legs of some Chrysomelidae,
subfamilies Bruchinae and Sagrinae (see Sagra
buqueti, left), may serve an antipredation function,
which is still not fully understood.