Article

Heightened perception of competition hastens courtship

Details

Citation

Santori C, Bussiere LF & Houslay TM (2020) Heightened perception of competition hastens courtship. Behavioral Ecology, 31 (1), pp. 239-246. https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/arz183

Abstract
When animals use costly labile display or signal traits to display to the opposite sex, they face complex decisions regarding the degree and timing of their investment in separate instances of trait expression. Such decisions may be informed by not only the focal individual’s condition (or pool of available resources) but also aspects of the social environment, such as perceptions of same-sex competition or the quality of available mates. However, the relative importance of these factors to investment decisions remains unclear. Here, we use manipulations of condition (through dietary nutrition), recent social environment (exposure to a silenced male, nonsilenced male, female, or isolation), and female mating history (single or multiple male) to test how quickly male decorated crickets (Gryllodes sigillatus) decide to begin courting an available female. We find that males that were previously housed with nonsilenced males started courting the female earlier than other males. Females only mounted males after courtship began. Our results suggest a strong effect of the perception of competition on the decision to invest resources in sexual signaling behavior and that females might exert directional selection on its timing.

Keywords
Sexual selection; courtship; condition-dependence; social experience; sexual signalling; phenotypic flexibility; Gryllodes sigillatus

Journal
Behavioral Ecology: Volume 31, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date31/01/2020
Publication date online29/10/2019
Date accepted by journal30/09/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/30840
ISSN1045-2249
eISSN1465-7279

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