No female mate choice in Mallee dragon lizards, Ctenophorus fordi

被引:0
|
作者
Mats Olsson
机构
[1] The University of Sydney,School of Biological Sciences
[2] The University of Göteborg,Department of Zoology, Animal Ecology
来源
Evolutionary Ecology | 2001年 / 15卷
关键词
lizards; mate choice; novel trait; sexual selection;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Aspects of sexual selection were studied in a sexually monomorphic Australian agamid lizard (Ctenophorus fordi), in particular with respect to the sensory exploitation hypothesis. In enclosure trials, females were offered the choice between ‘large’ vs. ‘small’ males and, in a different experiment, males with ‘blue’ vs. ‘normal’ head color. The rationale for these experiments was: firstly, to establish if females actively solicit copulations; secondly, if so, do females solicit copulations non-randomly with respect to male size (because large males may have access to food resources); thirdly, if male coloration is manipulated to match traits of congeneric, conspicuous and sexually dimorphic species, do females show preference for this novel trait (in accordance with the sensory exploitation hypothesis). The corresponding manipulations were also made in a free-living population where the distribution of females on the home ranges of color-manipulated males were monitored. Blue-headed males were accepted as mating partners both in the staged mating trials and in the natural population. Females appeared not to express any kind of active or passive mate choice (rejection); in only one out of 62 trials did a female approach a male herself rather than being approached by the male(s). There was no discrimination against any male category regardless of size or color within a female's receptive period and the manipulation of male head color in the natural population did not result in spatial re-distribution of females. Thus, a female appears to mate unselectively within her receptive period. Rejection behaviors were used only outside of the receptive period to communicate, to all males, that the female is not receptive.
引用
收藏
页码:129 / 141
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Concordance in mate choice in female mound-building mice
    Beigneux, Emilie
    Feron, Christophe
    Gouat, Patrick
    COMPTES RENDUS BIOLOGIES, 2012, 335 (03) : 220 - 225
  • [22] Early social experience shapes female mate choice in guppies
    Macario, Alessandro
    Croft, Darren P.
    Endler, John A.
    Darden, Safi K.
    BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY, 2017, 28 (03) : 833 - 843
  • [23] Diet influences female signal reliability for male mate choice
    Henneken, Jessica
    Jones, Theresa M.
    Goodger, Jason Q. D.
    Dias, Daniel A.
    Walter, Andre
    Elgar, Mark A.
    ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2015, 108 : 215 - 221
  • [24] Acoustic experience shapes female mate choice in field crickets
    Bailey, Nathan W.
    Zuk, Marlene
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2008, 275 (1651) : 2645 - 2650
  • [25] Sensory exploitation and plasticity in female mate choice in the swordtail characin
    Amcoff, Mirjam
    Lindqvist, Charlotte
    Kolm, Niclas
    ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2013, 85 (05) : 891 - 898
  • [26] Female mate choice is not affected by mate condition in a fish with male care
    Sundin, Josefin
    Sagebakken, Gry
    Kvarnemo, Charlotta
    ACTA ETHOLOGICA, 2013, 16 (03) : 189 - 194
  • [27] Rival assessment and comparison of morphological and performance-based predictors of fighting ability in Lake Eyre dragon lizards, Ctenophorus maculosus
    McLean, Claire A.
    Stuart-Fox, Devi
    BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 2015, 69 (04) : 523 - 531
  • [28] Female active sampling of male paint on bowers predicts female uncertainty in mate choice
    Keagy, Jason
    Hosler, Linda Cendes
    Borgia, Gerald
    ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2016, 116 : 131 - 137
  • [29] Is mate-choice copying a female phenomenon?
    Bowers, Robert Ian
    Pinar, Verda
    Sariyildiz, Selime Selay
    Parlak, Duru
    EVOLUTION AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2025, 46 (01)
  • [30] Female mate choice and the emergence of male coercion
    Glover, Kaylynne M.
    Crowley, Philip H.
    BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 2017, 71 (12)