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Energetic consequences of sexually selected characters in birds : studies on the swallow (Hirundo rustica) and the great tit (Parus major)Hall, Andrew Michael January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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The development and execution of mate choice in túngara frogsBaugh, Alexander Taylor 08 September 2010 (has links)
Interest in the question of when and how species recognition and mate preferences emerge in animals with strong species-typical predispositions has faded since the time of the classical ethologists. In its place, the role of plasticity has surfaced as a central emphasis in the study of animal behavior. Here, I step back and examine the origin and execution of sexual behavior in a tropical frog for which auditory predispositions are key. These experiments challenge assumptions about behavioral development, auditory perception, and stereotyped behavior. First, I illustrate when and how a sex- and species-typical behavior—conspecific phonotaxis—emerges during development. This study demonstrates that phonotaxis, presumably restricted to mature females, is present in both sexes early in postmetamorphic development—potentially long before such behavior might serve an adaptive function. I place this result in the context of hypotheses regarding the development of learned versus non-learned behaviors, and in light of the potential for perception to be altered by physiological changes occurring concomitantly with ontogeny. Next, I describe a set of dynamic mate choice studies that highlight how decision-making in a relatively simple system is more flexible, and less stereotyped, than was previously assumed. Results here show that frogs temporally update their mate choice decisions in a moment-to-moment fashion as advertisement signals change in real time. By decomposing the decision-making process, I determine the stimulus parameters essential for commitment to an initial phonotactic approach. These studies are followed up by experiments that reveal a high level of individual variation in female choosiness during mate choice. Lastly, I describe a mate choice study that revealed categorical perception in frogs, the first “lower” vertebrate now known to exhibit a perceptual mode previously considered a hallmark of “higher” organisms. Collectively, I make the following arguments: (1) constraints on sensory systems play a larger role in shaping behavior than is generally appreciated, irrespective of the involvement of learning; (2) unstudied sources of variation may contribute significantly to the raw material for sexual selection; and (3) phonotaxis in anurans amphibians is not the simple, stereotyped behavior that has been suggested of it in the past. / text
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The role of sexual imprinting in speciation: lessons from deer mice (genus Peromyscus)Kay, Emily Ho 21 October 2014 (has links)
Sexual imprinting, the process of learning mate preferences at a young age, could promote speciation by reducing attraction to individuals from divergent populations or species, consequently creating or maintaining reproductive isolation. Yet, despite the documentation of sexual imprinting in many taxa, its connection to speciation has been understudied. I chose to explore the potential link between sexual imprinting and reproductive isolation and in two North American rodents--the white-footed mouse (Peromyscus leucopus) and its sister species, the cotton mouse (Peromyscus gossypinus). These species have overlapping distributions in nature, possibly allowing interbreeding and admixture. In Chapter 1, I used double-digest restriction-associated DNA sequencing to test for hybridization in sympatric natural populations and found that 1.5% of sampled individuals showed evidence of admixture yet the species have maintained genetic distinctness in sympatry. In the lab, the species hybridize when given no choice of mates but mate more readily with conspecifics, suggesting that mating preferences may prevent hybridization in the wild. In Chapter 2, I tested whether mating preferences create significant reproductive isolation. I measured mating preferences in controlled laboratory conditions and found that both species and sexes preferred conspecific to heterospecific mates in 85% of trials. I then raised offspring with foster parents of the opposite species and found that P. leucopus has a genetically-determined preference while P. gossypinus learns its preference. In Chapter 3, I tested whether sexual imprinting on parental diet could generate assortative mating within a species. I tested this hypothesis by feeding P. gossypinus parents either orange- or garlic-flavored water, thereby exposing their offspring to these flavors through their parents until weaning. I tested the preferences of these offspring as adults and found that P. gossypinus, especially females, had strong assortative mating preferences. This implies that at least females learn parental dietary information and that assortative mating could evolve within a single generation. Together, my results confirm that sexual imprinting on parental traits--possibly mediated through dietary differences--can create assortative mating capable of generating sexual isolation and reducing gene flow between species. My research supports the importance of mating preferences and learning in speciation.
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Investigating the female mate preference brain : identifying molecular mechanisms underlying variation in mate preference in specific regions of a swordtail (Xiphophorus nigrensis) brainWong, Ryan Ying 02 June 2011 (has links)
Choosing with whom to mate is one of the most important decisions a female makes in her lifetime and inter-individual variation of these preferences can have important evolutionary consequences. In order to get a complete understanding of why and how females choose a mate, we must identify factors that can contribute to variation of female mate choice. Many decades of research sought to understand ultimate mechanisms of female mate choice with proximate mechanisms receiving a lot more attention in recent years. For my thesis, I identify intrinsic and extrinsic factors that correlate with individual variation of female Xiphophorus nigrensis mate preference. I provide evidence that a female’s size (e.g. age and sexual experience) as well as male behavioral displays can predict female mate preference. Using genes associated with female mate preference (neuroserpin, neurologin-3), I identify four brain regions (Dl, Dm, HV, POA) that show significant differences in gene expression between females exhibiting high preference for males relative to females displaying little mate preference. Neuroserpin and neuroligin-3 gene expression within these brain regions are also positively correlated with female mate preference behavior. Two of these brain regions (Dm and Dl) integrate multisensory information and are found in the putative teleost mesolimbic reward circuitry; the other two regions (HV and POA) are involved in sexual behaviors. With the implication of the reward circuitry, I assess whether there are changes in dopamine synthesis (via tyrosine hydroxylase, TH) in dopaminergic brain regions associated with the degree of mate preference. I do not find evidence of rapid changes (within 30 minutes) of TH expression (i.e. dopamine synthesis) in dopaminergic brain regions related to variation in female mate preference. Collectively my results suggest that mate preference behavior in the brain may be coordinated not just through regions associated with sexual response but also through forebrain areas that may integrate primary sensory information, with no associated changes of a proxy for dopamine synthesis in dopaminergic brain regions. / text
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Female Characteristics that Influence Male Mate Preference in House Mice (Mus Musculus)Costello, Aron K. 06 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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The Influence of Condition, Context, and Life History on Variation in Female Mate Preference in Xiphophorus FishesLyons, Susan M. 03 October 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Variation in Female Mating Preferences in Swordtail Fishes: the Importance of Social Experience, Male Aggression and Genetic VariationRobinson, Donelle M. 03 October 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Fitness-based mating: A systematic analysis of a new preference modelSchindler, Susanne 22 March 2011 (has links) (PDF)
Natural populations exhibit a non-random mating behavior and it is assumed that mate preferences causing the non-random mating behavior play a role in sympatric speciation.
In my thesis, I have proposed a new model of a mate preference that is based on ecological performance and I have named it fitness-based mating. Individuals that express this mate preference choose primarily fit partners.
Fitness-based mating is modelled for haploid, diallelic populations. Individuals are distributed across two niches, and genomes are simplified to two loci. The first locus is subject to natural selection, and the second-locus genotype gives the strength of the mate preference. The population is separated into females and males, among which only females exhibit the mate preference. Ecological selection acts on both sexes alike.
With the model I have investigated how female choosiness based on direct advantages offered by their partners can cause and maintain a polymorphic population. Fitness-based mating is an evolutionary successful mating strategy. It spreads in a population due to its amplifying effect on the reproductive success and on the attractiveness of its carriers. A polymorphism arises naturally in the model. The emergence of a stable polymorphism of traits underlying ecological selection is of special interest, because a polymorphism can be a precursor of speciation.
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Reduction of Competition Between Bisexual and Unisexual Females of Poecilia in Northeastern MexicoBalsano, Joseph S., Kucharski, Kristine, Randle, Edward J., Rasch, Ellen M., Monaco, Paul J. 01 February 1981 (has links)
Breeding compexes of poeciliid fishes with a bisexual and two unisexual species were studied for mechanisms permitting Sympatric coexistence. The unisexuals are gynogenetic and thereby sexually dependent on the males of the bisexual species for sperm to initiate development, but inheritance is entirely maternal. Bisexual females are more abundant in headwater localities; unisexuals increase in downstream localities. Males were 10 - 18% of the total poeciliid population, regardless of the relative proportions of bisexual to unisexual females. Downstream localities were typified by greater habitat diversity, including a variety of backwater pools. The unisexuals showed a marked preference for such pools. Both field and laboratory studies showed that all three types of females as well as males preferred shaded areas with a gravel substrate. Although the four types of fish were found together, nearest neighbour data indicated that each type of female preferred its own kind. Males courted throughout the year and were indiscriminate in their choice of mates. Despite the skewed sex ratio, males were not in short supply because only a few females were sexually receptive at a given time. No significant differences existed between bisexuals and unisexuals in their relative reproductive outputs, but they were asynchronous.
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Not what you expect: assortative male choice without assortative pairing pattern in a Nephila spider / Não é o que você espera: escolha assortativa do macho sem padrão de pareamento assortativo em uma aranha NephilaPollo, Pietro 20 July 2018 (has links)
Male mate choice occurs in species in which males face high mating costs, leading to few opportunities to copulate. Additionally, if male-male competition is strong, male mate choice should be influenced by male fighting ability. Good competitors should choose high quality females because they may be able to fight off contenders, while poor competitors should choose lower quality females. In Nephila clavipes spiders, males have limited sperm supply and fight for access to females. Here, using field experiments and observational data, we tested whether female quality and male size (a proxy of fighting ability) affect the pairing likelihood of males. In our experiments, we found that males did not express mate choice initially, but, after a few hours, chose their mates based on female size and female recent pairing status. Importantly, male mate choice direction and intensity varied with male size, as large males guarded larger females that were not recently paired and small males guarded smaller females that were recently paired. The observational data provided little evidence of assortative pairing regarding body size. With our field experiments, we show that crucial information can be collected by assessing mate choice in multiple moments. Taken together, our findings reveal the importance of considering male traits and the social context in understanding variation in male mate choice, which is often neglected in empirical studies / A escolha de parceiras por machos ocorre em espécies em que machos sofrem altos custos associados ao acasalamento, o que gera poucas oportunidades para copular. Adicionalmente, se a competição entre machos é intensa, a escolha de parceiras por machos deveria ser afetada pela habilidade de luta dos machos. Bons competidores deveriam escolher fêmeas de alta qualidade porque eles seriam capazes de afastar rivais, enquanto maus competidores deveriam escolher fêmeas de má qualidade. Em aranhas da espécie Nephila clavipes, machos possuem um estoque limitado de esperma e lutam pelo acesso a fêmeas. Usando experimentos de campo e dados observacionais, testamos se a qualidade das fêmeas e o tamanho dos machos (variável operacional de habilidade de luta) afetam a probabilidade de pareamento dos machos. Nos nossos experimentos, vimos que machos não expressam escolha de parceiras inicialmente, mas, depois de algumas horas, escolhem parceiras baseado no tamanho e no estado recente de pareamento delas. A direção e intensidade da escolha de parceiras por machos variou com o tamanho dos machos, pois machos grandes guardaram fêmeas maiores que não estavam pareadas recentemente, enquanto machos pequenos guardaram fêmeas menores que estavam pareadas recentemente. Nossos dados observacionais forneceram pouca evidência para pareamento assortativo referente a tamanho corporal. Com nossos experimentos de campo, mostramos que informação crucial pode ser coletada avaliando a escolha de parceiras em diferentes momentos. Em conjunto, nossos resultados revelam a importância de considerar características dos machos e contexto social no entendimento da variação na escolha de parceiras por machos, que é comumente negligenciada em estudos empíricos
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