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1.
Effect of female molt stage and sex ratio on courtship behavior of the blue crab Callinectes sapidus
In many species, males and females actively participate in courtship, and the outcome of pre-mating interactions influences
the mating success of both sexes. Female blue crabs, Callinectes sapidus, mate soon after their final molt to maturity; thus female molt stage dictates the timing of mating. In a field experiment,
we manipulated female molt stage and sex ratio to test their effects on the courtship behavior of both sexes, if female behavior
influences the behavior and pairing success of males, and if male courtship influences male pairing-success. Early-molt-stage
females avoided males during courtship, whereas late-molt-stage females sought out males. As a result, males had to pursue
and capture early-molt-stage females whereas males displayed to late-molt-stage females and more easily physically controlled
them. Males sometimes abandoned late-molt-stage females, but this occurred more often when females were abundant. The rate
at which females avoided males was positively correlated with that of males abandoning females, and males that were unsuccessful
at pairing met with higher rates of female resistance than successful males, suggesting that female behavior influences male
pairing-success. Unlike unsuccessful males, successful males more often made the transition between display and maintaining
physical control of the female. At high male sex ratios, males initiated courtship more readily; thus both sexual competition
and female behavior influence male courtship in this species.
Received: 7 July 1996 / Accepted: 10 January 1998 相似文献
2.
Limitations to colour-based sexual preferences in three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Female three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) are suggested to select mates based on their red nuptial coloration, males with a redder display being more preferred. Although
there are both laboratory and field data to support this view, there are also published accounts where females do not show
a preference for the redder male. Here we report the results of a series of 19 trials where receptive gravid female three-spined
sticklebacks were allowed to choose between two size-matched rival males. We used photographic and image analysis techniques
to quantify male nuptial coloration to investigate how the magnitude of the colour difference between the two alternative
males influenced female preferences. Using the amount of time a female spent oriented towards each male as a measure of his
attractiveness to her, females were not always found to select the redder of the two presented males. We did, however, find
that that the relative difference in coloration of the two males in each pair was important in determining the level of coloration-based
preference, with females only selecting redder males consistently when the difference in coloration was sufficiently large.
Received: 26 October 1999 / Received in revised form: 10 January 2000 / Accepted: 13 February 2000 相似文献
3.
Male costs and benefits associated with male display size in field populations of an Australian lekking Drosophila species were examined. Results suggested that male mating success increased with display size, since matings appeared to
be more common in large displays, and since the probability of males encountering a female increased as displays contained
more males. Female encounter probabilities did not increase once about 20 males or more were present on a display. Male size
and fighting costs tended to increase with display size. The distribution of males among displays did not follow the ideal
free distribution in the sense that each male did not have equal mating opportunity per unit time. Deviation from an ideal
free distribution may have been due to female preference for mating in aggregations rather than with solitary males, since
in a field experiment females were more willing for mating in an aggregation of five males than with solitary males.
Received: 22 May 1997 / Accepted after revision: 1 November 1997 相似文献
4.
Thomas Artiss Wesley M. Hochachka Kathy Martin 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1999,46(6):429-434
For several species of birds, high rates of male vigilance are correlated with high rates of female foraging. This relationship
is thought to ultimately result in higher reproductive success for females paired with highly vigilant males. However, previous
research has not examined the behavioural mechanism that produces the correlation between male vigilance and rates of female
foraging. Foraging females may take advantage of vigilance that males are using for other purposes. Alternatively, the purpose
of male vigilance may be to increase females' ability to forage. We examined these alternatives by testing whether vigilance
preceded or followed bouts of female foraging more often than would occur by chance alone, using simultaneous behaviour observations
of pre-incubation pairs of white-tailed ptarmigan (Lagopus leucurus). Our results indicate that each member of a pair may influence the behaviour of the other. Females were more likely to initiate
foraging bouts after males became vigilant than if their mate remained non-vigilant. Moreover, non-vigilant males were more
likely to become vigilant if their mate was foraging than if she was engaged in some other activity. Despite the possibility
that a sexual conflict exists as each member of a pair attempts to maximize its fitness, both sexes behave as though a major
role of male vigilance is to enhance female foraging opportunities.
Received: 3 May 1999 / Received in revised form: 14 June 1999 / Accepted: 16 June 1999 相似文献
5.
Female bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus) prefer dominant males; but what if there is no choice? 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
Both intra-sexual competition between males and female mate choice have been found to affect mating behaviour in rodents.
We studied female choice in the bank vole (Clethrionomys glareolus) under circumstances where male-male competition was excluded and the female could interact and mate freely with the males.
Mating behaviour was observed in two situations: (1) the female encountered two males with a clear dominance relationship;
and (2) the two males were equal in their social status. In all tests where a female in postpartum oestrus had a choice between
males of different social rank she mated with the dominant one. When choosing between an even pair of males there was no difference
in the frequency of lordotic responses, mounts or intromissions the female exhibited with either male before mating with one
of them. The mean ejaculation latency was significantly longer in the tests with an even pair of males than in the tests where
male hierarchy was clear. These results show that bank vole females are able to discriminate males according to their social
status and strongly prefer dominant males as mating partners. However, when the females were presented with two equal males,
they seemed to be unable to make a choice. The ability to choose the mating partner when the males are clearly different may
be an important direct benefit for the female in terms of time saved during mating and thus decreased risk of predation and
infanticide.
Received: 16 March 1995/Accepted after revision: 11 February 1996 相似文献
6.
Male willow warblers have song repertoires which vary in complexity along several dimensions. We examined whether female choice,
as measured by date of pairing, was based on these song characteristics in 4 different years. Pairing date was negatively
correlated with song repertoire size in 1 year, and with song versatility in another year, but there was no consistent effect
of any song characteristic on pairing throughout the years or in the pooled sample. The variable that best explained how soon
a male pairs is male arrival date (only males that had settled territories before the first female arrived were considered
in the analysis). This correlation is consistently significant in all years. This is most parsimoniously interpreted as females
choosing some habitat characteristic in the same way that males do. A small percentage of males (8.3%) attracted and paired
with a second female. The likelihood of becoming polygynous was not explained by any measured song characteristic, but it
was related to arrival date: early males were more likely to pair with two females. Males with large repertoires fledged more
young in their primary nests, and there was a trend for the offspring of these males to have a greater probability of being
recruited into the population. In conclusion, the results show that in most years there is no sexual selection by female preference
on song characteristics, although the data on reproductive success is consistent with the idea of repertoire size being an
indicator of male quality.
Received: 4 June 1999 / Received in revised form: 1 December 1999 / Accepted: 31 December 1999 相似文献
7.
Kathryn B. McNamara Julia L. McKenzie Mark A. Elgar Therésa M. Jones 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2012,66(8):1141-1147
Male mating status can affect female reproductive output if male ejaculate investment declines over consecutive matings. Accordingly, females are predicted to mate preferentially with virgin males. In mildly polyandrous lepidopterans, female fitness is less affected by reduced male investment than in more polyandrous species, and so the predictions for female mating preferences are less clear. We examined female mating preferences in the mildly polyandrous almond moth, Cadra cautella, in which ejaculate size does not affect female reproductive output. First, we allowed females to mate with virgin or once-mated males, in which the males were presented individually or simultaneously. We recorded the latency to mating and, in the case of the simultaneously presented trials, the identity of the successful, copulating male. We found that females mated more frequently with mated males (when simultaneously presented with both males), yet females did not differ in the time taken to initiate copulation with any male. We further examined if this mated male advantage was due to differential mate detection or locomotory behaviour of the male treatments. We tested the ability of virgin and mated males to locate a receptive female within a wind tunnel using long-distance pheromone cues and recorded their activity budget. We found no difference in the ability of mated or virgin males to locate or approach a receptive female, or in their activity levels. These data suggest a female preference for mated males in this species, a preference that may minimise other potential costs of mating. 相似文献
8.
L. Hughes B. Siew-Woon Chang D. Wagner N. E. Pierce 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2000,47(3):119-128
The mating system of the Australian lycaenid butterfly, Jalmenus evagoras, is highly unusual compared to most other Lepidoptera. Characteristics of this system, which has been termed an ’explosive
mating strategy,’ include the formation of an intensely competitive mating aggregation of males, a highly male biased operational
sex ratio, a lack of discrimination and mate choice by both sexes, a high variance in male mating success, and female monogamy.
In this study, we tested the hypothesis that multiple mating by males imposes physiological costs resulting in smaller spermatophores,
and that this results in a fitness cost to females. We found that male J. evagoras transferred only 2.2% of their eclosion weight during their first mating, consistent with the hypothesis that males of monandrous
species produce a relatively small investment. The wet weight of the ejaculate declined by an average of 27% at the second
mating and the dry weight by 29%, and an intermating interval of 5–9 days was needed for the ejaculate to return to the size
at the first mating, regardless of male size or age. Wet ejaculate mass increased proportionally with male size, though dry
mass was proportionally larger in smaller males. Ejaculate mass tended to increase with male age at both first and second
matings. Female characteristics, in general, did not affect ejaculate mass, although the wet weight of the ejaculate was positively
associated with female weight at the second mating. Copulation duration increased from 2.4 h to approximately 3 h at the second
mating, and to over 4 h at the third and fourth matings. Fecundity was positively correlated with female size but not with
mating history, copulation duration, or any other characteristics measured for either males or females. Female longevity declined
significantly as the number of times the male partner had previously mated increased. We conclude that despite the small male
investment in ejaculate, the costs of multiple mating may nonetheless be significant, as indicated by the reduction in ejaculate
mass, an increase in copulation duration, and reduction in female lifespan with increasing mating number.
Received: 22 January 1999 / Received in revised form: 28 July 1999 / Accepted: 18 September 1999 相似文献
9.
Akiko Matsumoto-Oda 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1999,46(4):258-266
For female chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) in the Mahale Mountains National Park, Tanzania, the most common mating pattern is opportunistic. In such opportunistic
matings, females copulated promiscuously but not randomly. This study describes female mate choice during 1-year observation
of six females who exhibited regular genital-swelling cycles. During the study period, 169 opportunistic matings and four
restrictive matings were recorded over the course of 51 days. As female estrus progressed, mating frequency and the number
of adult male mating partners increased, although the number of potential mating partners did not change. Criteria of female
choice examined were the direction and consent/rejection of courtship, proximity maintenance, and female grooming. Adult-male
courtships were successful more often than those of adolescent males. During the earlier phase of estrus, females copulated
rather promiscuously with many males. But during the later phase of estrus when the likelihood of conception is expected to
be highest, they copulated repeatedly with high-ranking adult males. There was a positive correlation between female grooming
frequency and mating frequency when the likelihood of conception was greatest. Female chimpanzees are thought to choose high-ranking
males as fathers of their offspring. Moreover, female chimpanzees may adopt one or both of two mating strategies, i.e., a
many-male strategy and a best-male strategy.
Received: 23 November 1998 / Received in revised form: 12 April 1999 / Accepted: 26 April 1999 相似文献
10.
Condition-dependent control of paternity by female purple martins: implications for coloniality 总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9
Proposed causal links between extra-pair copulation (EPC) and colony formation in socially monogamous birds hinge on the
question of which sex controls fertilizations. We examined in colonial purple martins Progne subis (1) whether EPCs were forced or accepted by females, and (2) the degree to which apparently receptive females were able to
obtain EPCs against their mates’ paternity defenses. Paternity analyses of multilocus DNA fingerprinting confirmed previous
findings of a marked relationship between age class and extra-pair fertilizations (EPFs), with young males losing paternity
of 43% (n = 53) of their putative offspring compared to 4% (n = 85) by old males. All assignable extra-pair offspring were sired by old males, with one male obtaining most EPFs each year.
Contrary to the hypothesis that EPCs are forced, EPF frequency within age class did not increase with seasonal increases in
the number of males per fertile female. Whereas the male control hypothesis predicted that the male age class that mate-guarded
more would be cuckolded less, the reverse was true: young males guarded significantly more intensely. The male age class difference
in cuckoldry could not be explained by the possibility that young and inexperienced females (which are usually paired to young
males) were more vulnerable to forced copulation because EPFs were unrelated to female age. These findings suggest that females
(1) pair with old males and avoid EPCs, or (2) pursue a mixed mating strategy of pairing with young males and accepting EPCs
from old males. The receptivity to EPCs by females paired to young males put them in conflict with their mates. Two factors
determined the paternity achieved by young males: (1) the relative size of the male to the female, with young males achieving
much higher paternity when they were larger than their mates, and (2) the intensity of mate-guarding. Both variables together
explained 77% of the variance in paternity and are each aspects of male-female conflict. Given female receptivity to EPCs,
mate-guarding can be viewed as male interference with female mating strategies. We conclude that EPCs are rarely or never
forced, but the opportunity for females paired to young males to obtain EPCs is relative to the ability of their mates to
prevent them from encountering other males. Evidence of mixed mating strategies by females, combined with other features of
the martin mating system, is consistent with the female-driven “hidden lek hypothesis” of colony formation which predicts
that males are drawn to colonies when females seek extra-pair copulations.
Received: 23 March 1995/Accepted after revision: 14 January 1996 相似文献
11.
Association patterns of sailfin mollies (Poecilia latipinna): alternative hypotheses 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
Caitlin Gabor 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1999,46(5):333-340
Individuals may associate with each other due to a variety of selective forces, such as intra- and intersexual selection,
and conspecific recognition. Previous studies have concluded that mate choice governs association behavior in polygynous species
of fish. I examined whether mate choice underlies the preference for larger individuals by examining preference for association
(time spent in proximity to a fish) not only between opposite-sex individuals but also between same-sex individuals of the
live-bearing sailfin molly (Poecilia latipinna). Males and females from three size classes were tested with a large and a small object fish of the same and opposite sex.
Females preferred to associate with larger over smaller males. Males also preferred to associate with larger over smaller
females, as expected. The same female and male test fish also preferred to associate with larger over smaller fish of the
same sex. Moreover, females demonstrated no significant difference in their strength of preference (large–small) when offered
males or females. The same held true for males. When males and females were subsequently tested with one large male and one
large female, females tended to prefer large males while males showed no significant preference for association based on sex.
In another experiment, females were tested with a large female and a small male, and significantly preferred the former. These
findings suggest that association patterns may have arisen under a variety of conditions, such as predation pressures, shoaling
behavior, and associative preference behavior. The assumption that association behavior is a uniformly sufficient predictor
of mate choice in fish needs to be re-examined for P. latipinna and other species.
Received: 6 November 1998 / Received in revised form: 12 May 1999 / Accepted: 12 May 1999 相似文献
12.
Five hypotheses have been proposed to explain polygyny in the red-winged blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus). We categorized the hypotheses into three groups based on female preference for unmated versus monogamously mated males:
(1) the “polygyny threshold” model, “sexy son” hypothesis and the “asynchronous settlement” model, which assume that females
prefer unmated males to mated males on breeding situations of homogeneous quality; (2) the “neutral mate choice” hypothesis,
which assumes that females have no preference; and (3) the “cooperative female choice” model, which assumes that females prefer
monogamously mated males to unmated males. We tested the direction of female preference in two field experiments. In both
experiments, newly settling females were given a choice of two adjacent territories, one defended by an unmated male and the
other by a monogamously mated male. Male mating status was randomized with respect to the variation in territory quality and
male quality. Early in the breeding season, significantly more females settled with the unmated males than with the mated
males. Although more females settled with the unmated males than with the mated males late in the breeding season, the difference
was no longer significant. Female settlement late in the season appeared to be related to the tenure of the resident females:
the new females avoided territories where the resident females were in early stages of their nesting, but settled on territories
where the resident females were in late stages. The pattern of female settlement shows that females prefer unmated males to
mated males. The preference is consistent with the polygyny threshold model, sexy son hypothesis and the asynchronous settlement
model, and inconsistent with the neutral mate choice hypothesis and the cooperative female choice model. For this reason,
the latter two hypotheses are unlikely to explain the occurrence of polygyny in our population of red-winged blackbirds.
Received: 1 December 1994 / Accepted after revision: 28 October 1995 相似文献
13.
In monogamous species, females often choose between males according to the quality of the territories they defend, but the
extent to which females themselves contribute to territory defence is frequently underestimated. Here we test for differences
in male and female roles during paired scent-marking bouts, a key component of territorial defence, in a monogamous antelope.
In two populations (Kenya, Zimbabwe) of klipspringer, Oreotragus oreotragus, both males and females usually scent-marked at the same site, but there were significant differences between sexes in terms
of investment within bouts. Females initiated most bouts, thus dictating the marking strategy of the pair. Males initiated
relatively few bouts, but deposited more scent marks per bout than females and were usually the last to scent-mark before
leaving the site; they marked on the same branches as the female and thus overmarked her scent. Both sexes deposited more
marks during paired than solo visits. Immediately preceding and following scent-marking bouts, males approached females and
females left males more often than expected. Female scent-marking rates were higher when they were receptive than at other
times, and this increase was matched by elevated marking rates of males. Females may increase marking rates when they are
receptive in order to test the quality of their mate or to incite male competition. However, these ideas are unlikely to explain
female scent-marking behaviour outside the mating season, which appears to be related primarily to territorial defence. We
suggest that these differences in investment in scent-marking bouts are consistent with predictions that females may be autonomously
territorial and that overmarking of female scent by males is a form of mate-guarding.
Received: 17 November 1999 / Received in revised form: 24 February 2000 / Accepted: 13 March 2000 相似文献
14.
To father offspring, a male must succeed at two processes of sexual selection: (1) mate with a female and (2) fertilize her eggs. We investigated the relationships between pre- and post-copulatory male traits and female mating responses in wild-captured and laboratory-reared spring field crickets, Gryllus veletis. The phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis suggests that females may receive a direct benefit, enhanced fertilization efficiency, by mating with males that signal attractively. We measured fine-scale components of male acoustic mate attraction signals as well as how much time males spent signalling, measured female preference for males in mating trials and then quantified sperm number and viability. We found no relationship between male signalling traits and male fertility or female preference, providing no evidence for the phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis. We also found no difference in sperm metrics between wild-captured and laboratory-reared males. While female crickets may receive benefits by choosing males based on acoustic signal characteristics, whether the benefits are a result of genetic quality, seminal fluid contents or some other male trait remains unknown. 相似文献
15.
Male–male competition has historically been considered the major force driving sexual selection. However, female choice and inter-sexual conflict are increasingly recognized as important influences affecting differential mating and reproductive success. Many females exhibit preferences for particular males; however, male strategies may conflict with females’ ability to obtain their mate preferences. To influence paternity, females must affect both (1) whether or not sexual interactions occur, particularly during the periovulatory period (POP) and (2) the outcome of sexual interactions. This study focuses on the effectiveness of female choice in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus). Over 2,600 h of data were collected on two habituated chimpanzee communities in the Taï National Park, Côte d’Ivoire. Female mate preferences were measured by quantifying proceptive and resistance behavior toward males in both the periovulatory period and non-POP phases of estrus. The efficacy of female preference was measured both (1) by measuring success rates of female proceptivity and resistance behaviors and (2) by determining how well measures of female mate preference (proceptivity and resistance rates) predict male mating success. Though male chimpanzees are clearly dominant to females, the results indicate that females could effectively resist male solicitations and, in most cases, unwanted copulations were averted. Both female proceptivity and resistance rates correlate (positively and inversely, respectively) with male mating success in POP. Outside POP, female proceptivity rates corresponded with male mating success, but resistance rates did not. Males (irrespective of rank) that were preferred by females obtained higher mating success compared to other males during the POP, suggesting that females were effective in their mate choice and that, despite clear male dominance, female choice influences paternity in wild chimpanzees. 相似文献
16.
Female distribution affects mate searching and sexual selection in male northern water snakes (Nerodia sipedon) 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Mating systems and sexual selection are assumed to be affected by the distribution of critical resources. We use observations
of 312 mating aggregations to compare mate-searching success of male northern water snakes (Nerodia sipedon) in two marshes in which differences in mating substrate availability resulted in more than fourfold differences in female
dispersion. Reproductive males had significantly larger home ranges where females were dispersed than where females were clumped.
The number of females encountered by males increased significantly with male home range size where females were dispersed,
and decreased significantly where females were clumped. Where females were clumped, males were more likely to encounter other
males when they located females. We found no evidence in either population that mate searching was energetically expensive
or that males with relatively more energy had larger home ranges. However, males with greater fat reserves at the start of
the season participated in more mating aggregations when females were dispersed, suggesting that fat reserves could affect
a male’s willingness to attempt mating or to persist in aggregations. When females were dispersed there was weak stabilizing
selection acting to maintain male body size (β=–0.14), but strong directional selection favoring larger (β=0.50) and fatter
(β=0.37) males. Over 7 years, the intensity of selection favoring larger males varied substantially (β=0.14–1.15), but that
variation was not related to variation in the operational sex ratio. We found no evidence of directional selection on either
body size (β=0.05) or fat reserves (β=0.10) of males when females were spatially clumped. Overall, the distribution of females
had a pronounced effect on male behavior, on the factors that affected male success in locating females, and probably on the
extent of sperm competition once females had been located.
Received: 23 November 1998 / Received in revised form: 9 August 1999 / Accepted: 18 August 1999 相似文献
17.
Summary In some species of fishes with paternal care, females prefer to spawn with males already defending eggs. Such female preference appears to have resulted in adoption of unrelated eggs as a male mating strategy in several species. Page and Swofford (1984) proposed that such female preference may have also resulted in the evolution of male egg-mimics in several species of darters (Percidae); however, their hypothesis has not been tested. We examined female preference in the fantail darter (Etheostoma flabellare) and found that females preferred males with eggs over males without eggs, and males with egg-mimics over males without egg-mimics. Thus it appears that female preference for males already guarding eggs may have led to the evolution of specialized egg-mimicking morphology in males. 相似文献
18.
Fleur E. Champion de Crespigny Nina Wedell 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,61(8):1229-1235
The maternally inherited bacterium Wolbachia pipientis generates strong reproductive incompatibilities between uninfected females and infected males (cytoplasmic incompatibility),
significantly reducing both female and male reproductive success. Such fitness costs are thought to place selective pressure
on hosts to evolve pre-copulatory preferences for mating with compatible mates, thereby enabling them to avoid the reproductive
incompatibilities associated with Wolbachia. Therefore, uninfected females are predicted to prefer mating with uninfected males, whereas infected males are predicted
to prefer mating with infected females. Despite these predictions, previous investigations of pre-copulatory mate preferences
in Wolbachia-manipulated Drosophila have not found evidence of female preference for uninfected or compatible males. However, none of these studies utilised
a design where focal individuals are provided with a simple choice in a relatively non-competitive situation. We examined
both female and male pre-copulatory mate preference based on mate infection status in Drosophila simulans and D. melanogaster using simple choice assays involving between 30–50 replicates per treatment. Although we found no evidence of female pre-copulatory
mate preferences in either species, male D. simulans exhibited some preference for mating with females of the same infection status. However, this preference was not evident
when we repeated the experiment to confirm this finding. Consequently, we conclude that neither male nor female D. melanogaster and D. simulans exhibit significant Wolbachia-associated pre-copulatory mate preferences. 相似文献
19.
Summary Female dance-flies, Empis borealis L., gather to swarm, and males carrying nuptial gifts visit swarms for mating. Field observations and experiments were performed on this behaviorally sex-role reversed species to test models of lekking behavior. The key predictions were: (1) female preference model: male visiting rate and mating rate should increase with the number of females in swarm (swarm size), (2) hotspot model: male visiting rate should be independent of swarm size, and (3) hotshot model: swarm size should be positively correlated with the body size of the largest female in swarm. We found that male visiting rate and mating rate increased with swarm size, and that mating rate per female increased with swarm size. Males also mated more often in larger swarms than in smaller ones. Both males and females visited swarm sites even in the absence of other individuals. When females were successively removed from swarm sites more males than females on average arrived at these sites: 2.25 males per female. When no individuals were present at the swarm site, arriving males moved on to another site, whereas arriving females generally stayed. Larger experimental swarm-markers attracted both more males and more females and even more males when swarming females were present. There was no correlation between mean or median female size in swarms and the number of females in swarms. Thus, the female preference model and the hotspot model were corroborated, while other models were judged unlikely to explain swarming behavior in E. borealis.
Correspondence to: B.G. Svensson 相似文献
20.
Parental investment, potential reproductive rates, and mating system in the strawberry dart-poison frog, Dendrobates pumilio 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
We studied the effect of relative parental investment on potential reproductive rates (PRRs) to explain sex differences in
selectivity and competition in the dart-poison frog Dendrobates pumilio. We recorded the reproductive behavior of this species in a Costa Rican lowland rainforest for almost 6 months. Females spent
more time on parental care than males, and `time out' estimates suggest that PRRs of males are much higher than than those
of females, rendering females the limiting sex in the mating process. Males defended territories that provide suitable calling
sites, space for courtship and oviposition, and prevent interference by competitors. Male mating success was highly variable,
from 0 to 12 matings, and was significantly correlated with calling activity and average perch height, but was independent
of body size and weight. Estimates of opportunity for sexual selection and variation in male mating success are given. The
mating system is polygamous: males and females mated several times with different mates. Females were more selective than
males and may sample males between matings. The discrepancy in PRRs between the sexes due to differences in parental investment
and the prolonged breeding season is sufficient to explain the observed mating pattern i.e., selective females, high variance
in male mating success, and the considerable opportunity for sexual selection.
Received: 9 June 1998 / Received in revised form: 27 March 1999 / Accepted: 3 April 1999 相似文献