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The role of sex on behavioral responses to mating signals studies of phonotaxis and evoked calling in male and female túngara frogs /Bernal, Ximena Eugenia, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2007. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Mate selection preferences of captive female cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) /Batkay, Dalma. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.)--York University, 2005. Graduate Programme in Biology. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 209-216). Also available on the Internet. MODE OF ACCESS via web browser by entering the following URL: http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url%5Fver=Z39.88-2004&res%5Fdat=xri:pqdiss &rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:MR11749
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Female receptivity, song requirement and preferences in <em>Drosophila virilis</em> and <em>D. montana</em>Isoherranen, E. (Eija) 22 February 1999 (has links)
Abstract
Most models of sexual selection focus on coevolution of male
sexual trait and female preference for the trait. However, whether
the female preference modifies the male trait depends on the overall
receptivity of females, on the importance of the male trait for
the females, on female sampling behaviour, and on female control
over copulation decision. These aspects are often neglected by theoreticians.
Female receptivity, song requirement and preferences were
studied in two Drosophila virilis group species, D.
montana and D. virilis. The main
object of the study was female acceptance/rejection behaviour.
Female wing spreading posture was a signal for males to attempt
copulation, when the female was ready to mate. I used this signal
as an indicator of female acceptance. D. virilis females
were generally very receptive, but there were differences between
females both in receptivity and in responsiveness of the females
to simulated courtship songs. D. virilis female
did not require song and had a low acceptance threshold with a
heterospecific male. These two traits are explained by a high female
receptivity. D. montana females, on the contrary,
had a high acceptance threshold. These females accepted the courting
male only after hearing his song. They also repelled males, which
attempted copulation without female acceptance signal. In this
species the strength of species discrimination did not correlate
with the overall receptivity of the females. Between species hybrid
females (from a cross vir x mo and
from backcross to mo) resembled D.
montana females in their song requirement, but not in
their receptivity. This suggests that these two traits are inherited
independently.
D. montana and D. littoralis females
have previously been found to prefer males with short and dense
sound pulses in wild. These song characters were repeatable among
overwintered males in a fashion different from other song characters.
This shows that song characters involved in sexual selection are
more sensitive to environmental factors than other song traits.
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Mate choice and genetic variation in male courtship song in <em>Drosophila montana</em>Suvanto, L. (Leena) 24 March 1999 (has links)
Abstract
This thesis deals with factors affecting mate choice as well
as with genetic variation in male courtship song in Drosophila
montana. Males, which produced song with a high carrier
frequency, were found to court females, and also to succeed in
their courtship more often than the males producing low frequency
song. Male mating success correlated with the carrier frequency
of his song recorded after, but not before, an "artificial
winter", which suggests that a sexually selected male
trait is sensitive to environmental factors. A high carrier frequency
of male courtship song correlated positively with the survival
rate of the male's progeny from egg to adulthood (indirect
benefit for the female), but not with the fecundity of his mating
partner (no direct benefit for the female).
The heritabilities and the amount of additive and residual
variation in male courtship song characters were measured in two
populations using father-son regression and sib analysis. The songs
of the males from one of these populations were analysed for a
second time after the cold treatment. Most heritability values
were insignificant, largely due to high residual variation. During
the cold treatment, the additive variation increased and the residual
variation decreased in almost all song traits. Increased variation
in sexually selected traits may help the females to exercise selection between
the males during the mating season of the flies in the wild in
spring. This, and the fact that male song gives the female information
about the male's condition/genetic quality suggests
that in this species the evolution of female preferences for male
song characters could have evolved through condition-dependent
viability selection as postulated by "good genes" models.
Variation and inbreeding depression/heterosis were
studied in traits associated with fly reproduction using inbred
D. montana strains. Songs, hydrocarbons and some behavioural traits
of the flies varied significantly between strains. The strain of
both sexes affected female egg-laying, and the female strain, also,
the survival rate of the flies' progeny, in different
intra- and interspecific combinations. Heterosis was found in the
mating propensity of the flies and in the carrier frequency of
the male song. Diallel analysis revealed unidirectional dominance
towards higher carrier frequency. This direction is the same as
the direction of sexual selection exercised by the females of this
species suggesting that sexual selection could be a driving force
in evolution of this song trait.
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The courtship process as metaphor for work identification and engagementGudmanz, Hylton 01 September 2015 (has links)
M.A. / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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Motley Views: Evolutionary Impact of Audience Perception on Morphology and Behavior in Two Jumping Spiders, Synemosyna formica & Habronattus pyrrithrixDodson, Alexis 04 October 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Naphthenic Acids Disrupt Courtship in Silurana tropicalisZhang, Wo Su 30 September 2020 (has links)
Neuroendocrine processes coordinate the behavioural, physiological, and seasonal aspects of reproduction. Some chemicals can disrupt the hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal axis, impacting reproductive health. Naphthenic acids (NAs), the carboxylic acids in petroleum, are of emerging concern as they contaminate coastlines after oil spills and aquatic ecosystems of the Athabasca oil sands area. They are acutely toxic in fish and tadpoles and possibly endocrine disrupting at sublethal levels. I characterized courtship behaviours and disruption by NAs in the Western clawed frog, Silurana tropicalis. Courtship primarily consists of males producing low trills and achieving amplexus, a mating position where a male clasps a female. Adult frogs were exposed for five days to 20 mg/L NA, a dose low enough to not affect physical activity. In males, absolute calling activity was reduced. Other acoustic parameters such as dominant frequency, click rate, and trill length were not affected. Injecting human chorionic gonadotropin had a slight rescue effect. Vocalization and amplexus were both inhibited after exposure and restored after 2 weeks of recovery. However, calling behaviour did not predict competitive ability or mating success. In females, NA exposure reduced mating success, possibly through decreased attractiveness or receptivity. Receptivity can be indicated by attraction towards the sound of mating calls (phonotaxis), which is cryptic and subjective. I created an apparatus that measures phonotaxis by placing speakers inside traps with infrared lights to detect the time of entry. This novel method is widely applicable for low-visibility observations and studies of choice and preference. This work shows that an aquatic contaminant can reduce mating success in otherwise healthy frogs, and provides a detailed foundation for further investigation.
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Courtship and Marriage Rituals in Seventeenth Century EnglandKlodt, Lindsay M. 12 May 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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The Need for Control in Interpersonal Relationships and Courtship Violence.Dunaway, Marcella Horn 01 December 2002 (has links) (PDF)
This study explored an individual's need for control and the level of violence within a dating relationship.
This was a self-report study. Subjects consisted of 175 students from a university in the southern Appalachian region of the U.S. Questionnaires were combined with a scenario depicting violent behavior. Subjects were asked to rate their level of control on the Fundamental Interpersonal Relations Inventory (FIRO-B), to complete the Conflict Tactics Scale - revised (CTS-2), and to rate the acceptability of the scenario. Data were analyzed using an ANOVA.
Results did not support the main hypothesis. No relationship was found between control and violent behavior, or between men and women and their expression of control. There was no connection between violence and level of expressed control. Men showed more approval for violence than women. Individuals with higher levels of expressed control were more accepting of violence than others without the need to control.
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Reproductive Consequences of CRISPR/Cas9-Based avp Knock-Out in Zebrafish (Danio rerio)Ramachandran, Divya 06 December 2022 (has links)
The nonapeptide family of hormones is deeply conserved in evolution. In teleost fishes, as in all vertebrates, two nonapeptide families exist. These are vasotocin (avp) and oxytocin (oxt). While vasotocin has been shown to regulate individual aspects of reproductive physiology in several teleost species, an integrative assessment of its role on male and female reproduction is currently lacking even in widely used fish models, such as the zebrafish (Danio rerio). Taking advantage of the genetic tractability of the zebrafish, and its emerging status as model to study reproductive physiology, I generated avp -/- mutants using a CRISPR/Cas9 based approach to determine reproductive consequences in female and male zebrafish. Following the identification of a female-specific reproductive phenotype which manifests as a reduction in oocyte release and decreased quivering behaviour, I investigated the potential mechanistic basis at the level of the gonad. In avp -/- ovaries, significantly fewer eggs were present compared to WT fishes. When comparing the distribution of oocyte maturation stages, a significantly lower percentage of stage I and higher percentage of stage V oocytes was present in avp-/- ovaries. The altered distribution in oocyte maturation stages coincided with significant decreases in ovarian transcript abundance of nanos2, a germ-cell specific marker suggesting a possible role for Avp in germ-cell maintenance. Additionally, I observed a decrease in the ovarian concentration of the prostaglandin PGF2, which coincided with a reduction in ovarian transcript abundance of pla2g4ab, a paralogue of the phospholipase A2 involved in mobilizing arachidonic acid, a precursor of PGF2,. Together, these finding suggests a role for Avp in PGF2 -mediated ovulation. Because Avp has pleiotropic effects and may thus affect female reproductive physiology indirectly, we assessed somatic growth, a key regulator of sexual maturation in zebrafish, as well as aspects of the endocrine stress axis known to affect oocyte growth in avp -/- mutants. While avp -/- mutants did not exhibit differences in somatic growth up to sexual maturation or GSI, mutants exhibited hypercortisolism. While other zebrafish knock-out mutants exhibiting persistent hypercortisolism do not share the observed reproductive phenotype, future studies investigating potential contributions of pleiotropic Avp effects are nevertheless warranted. Overall, I demonstrate that avp, while not essential, affects female reproductive success, at least
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in part by regulating oocyte maturation. This finding is in line with the recent findings from other vertebrate and invertebrate species, suggesting an evolutionarily ancient role in these processes. It is anticipated that such novel insights into the regulation of female oocyte maturation have in addition to increasing our understanding of female reproduction, translational potential for captive breeding (aquaculture, species conservation) and ecotoxicology (insight into mode of action of specific EDCs).
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