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Egg-mimicry as a mating strategy in the fantail darter,Etheostoma flabellare: females prefer males with eggs
Authors:Roland A Knapp  Robert Craig Sargent
Institution:(1) Behavioral and Evolutionary Ecology Research Group, T.H. Morgan School of Biological Sciences, University of Kentucky, 40506-0225 Lexington, KY, USA;(2) Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, University of California, 93106 Santa Barbara, CA, USA
Abstract: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.
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