Title: Mating behaviour continued female choice
1Mating behaviour continuedfemale choice
2Summary
- Female dispersion influenced by resource
distribution - Male distribution influenced by female dispersion
- BUT, females are not passive participants
- Greater energy investment by females means they
should make good decisions - Select mates carefully
3Females should choose mates that
- Provide resources that maximize her reproductive
success, or - Pass on good genes to her offspring
4Monogamy vs polygamy
Polygamy (1 sex acquires multiple mates)
Monogamy (1 male 1 female)
Polygyny (1 male multiple females)
Polyandry 1 female multiple males)
5Mating systems
- Can be categorized along this continuum
- But there are numerous variations within each
category - Intra- and inter-species variation
6In many species
- e.g., Red-winged Blackbirds
- Males defend territories that contain resources
that females need - Females settle on the males territories which
contain the required resources - Resource defence polygyny
7Males with high quality territories
- Have higher mating success
- Mate with more females
- Father more offspring
- But females are not passive participants in the
process
8Resource defence polygyny
- From what we have already learned about natural
selection - And the relative differences in energy invested
by males and females - We can predict that females should carefully
assess male and/or territory quality before they
settle
9Polygyny Threshold Model
10Polygyny Threshold Model
11Polygyny Threshold Model
12Polygyny Threshold Model
13Polygyny Threshold Model
14How can we apply this model
- Often difficult to quantify territory quality
- We may not know what attributes are critical to
reproductive success
15But we can often rank territories
- Using features that have been shown to correlate
with reproductive success - Quality of nesting sites
- Abundance of resources
- Male settling patterns
-
-
16Predictions of the model
17Predictions of the model
18Predictions of the model
19Predictions of the model
20Patterns of occupancy
- Are consistent with the model
- Best territories are occupied first
21In resource defence polygyny
- Do females choose males or resources?
- Wrasses
22Wrasses
- Feed on ecoparasites
- In some species females remain attached to
feeding sitesdefend territories from other
females - Males defend these sites (females territories)
male territories encompass up to 6 females
territories - Do females then choose these sites or the males?
23Wrasses
- Removal experiments
- Remove replaced malesfemales remain attached
to the same sites - Remove replaced Femalessites changed
- Therefore females choose sites
24Female choice
- In other cases females appear to choose male
characteristics - Difficult to separate male quality from territory
quality - High quality males are associated with best
territories
25Elaborate plumage in birds
- Darwin recognised that these traits seemed to
function by attracting females - They seemed to also have a survival disadvantage
- Energy to produce and maintain
- Increased risk of predation
26Theoretical paradox
- Why are these traits not eliminated by natural
selection? - Sexual selection is working in the opposite
direction to natural selection - How do such extreme examples like peacock
feathers evolve - Why do females prefer these traits?
- Why doesnt natural selection prevent these
extremes?
27Hypothesis
- Runaway selection
- Good genes hypothesis
28What is the selective advantage to females?
- Runaway selection
- Trait may initially be adaptive
- e.g. females prefer males with longer tails
- Initially longer tails may make birds better
fliers - They females develop a preference for longer
tails because there traits will be passed on to
her sons
29What is the selective advantage to females
- Now males with longer tails have a double
advantage - Better fliers and more attractive to females
30Fisher Lande
- If a genetic preference for elaborate plumage by
females is linked to the gene(s) involved in the
production of the character in males - Offspring that are produced will have both
- The elaborate plumage (males)
- Preference for males with the most elaborate
plumage (females)
31Runaway selection
32Good genes hypothesis
- Elaborate traits provide information about the
males qualityGood genes - Elaborate plumage may correlate with
- Age
- Body size
- Energy reserves
33Male Guppies
- Wild guppies
- Large brightly coloured tails correlate with
efficient feeding and that acquisition of high
quality food -
34Handicap hypothesis
- Males invest in traits that are handicaps
- The fact that they survive despite their
handicaps indicates they have high quality genes
35Hamilton and Zuk Hypothesis
- A version of the handicap hypothesis
- Bright colours indicate resistance to parasites
- Data Found correlation between parasite load and
plumage quality - Blind experiment
- Bright plumage indicated parasite resistance
36Hamilton and Zuk Hypothesis
- Suggested that bright colours are an honest
signal of resistance to parasites - Birds are subject to a large number of blood
parasites - Only those that can cope with the parasites can
fully express the plumage characteristics
37Other examplesBower Birds
- Males build and decorate bower
- Handicap has been moved to an external
structure - Females prefer the most elaborate bowers
- They are built by
- Older experienced males
- Larger males
- Males with the most energy to spare
- Males compete for decorations
- Rare decorations are preferred
38Marsh wrens
- Males build dummy nests
- Males with the most (or best) dummy nests attract
the most mates
39Leks
- Males defend small territories
- No resources
- Females select mates based on display quality
- Nesting takes place elsewhere
40Alternate reproductive strategies
- Ocellated wrasse
- Four distinct male strategies
- A) Territorial
- B) Sneaker
- C) Intermediate
- D) Pirate
41Alternate reproductive strategies
- Bluegill, threespine stickleback and blue-headed
wrasse - Have territorial males and sneakers
42Alternate reproductive strategies
- Bluegill
- Separate strategies
- Genetically developmentally determined
43Alternate reproductive strategies
- Blue-headed wrasse
- Young males are making the best of a bad
situation - Too young and small to hold territories become
sneakers - males are both sneakers and territory holders in
their lifetimes
44Alternate reproductive strategies
- Threespine stickleback
- Males switch back and forth
- All males hold territories and defend nests
- Sneak into neighbouring males territories if
opportunities arise
45Nest parasitism
- Brown headed cowbirdObligate nest parasites
- Lay eggs in host species nests
- Unable to raise there own young
46Nest parasitism
- Goldeneye ducksFacultative nest parasites
- Capable or rearing young but will
opportunistically lay extra eggs in nests of
conspecifics
47Extra Pair Paternity
- We are just beginning to understand the true
complexity of mating systems - We now know that in monogamous species like tree
swallows have significant proportions of there
offspring sired by extra-pair matings - Alternative female reproductive strategies?
48Other variations exist
- We will encounter some of them when we look at
- Cooperative breeding
- Parental investment
49Implications for conservation
- Where courtship and mating behaviour occurs may
be only one habitat feature we need to consider - e.g. Lek breeding species--the focus may be on
the Lek but nesting requirements are equally
important
50Implications for conservation
- Species with alternate reproductive strategies
- The focus may be on the territorial males but
habitat requirements of sneakers are equally
importantespecially if they are genetically
distinct as in bluegills
51Implications for conservation
- Nest parasitism
- Needs to be considered
- When locating nest boxes
- Considering forest fragmentation