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Early social experience shapes female mate choice in guppies
journal contribution
posted on 2017-05-01, 00:00 authored by A Macario, D P Croft, John EndlerJohn Endler, S K DardenPublished by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology. All rights reserved. Mating decisions are often plastic and individuals adjust their decisions depending on the social and ecological environment. Although the implications of the social environment on mate choice has been well studied in species with parental care, surprisingly little research has examined the role played by the social environment experienced during ontogeny in species lacking parental care. We used guppies to test the hypothesis that females alter their mate choice in response to variation in the distribution of male sexual traits encountered during development. To manipulate their juvenile experience, we exposed maturing females to groups of males differing in the values of male coloration, known to be sexual traits in guppies. These exposures were carried out either during the entire developmental period or the latter half of the developmental period. Both choosiness and preference functions for a number of male color traits were affected by rearing treatments. Furthermore, females exhibited disassortative preferences for the phenotypes experienced as juveniles, suggesting a rare-male advantage. Finally, depending on male stimuli, only long-exposed females formed preferences for specific male colors. Our study demonstrates the importance of socially mediated preferences and highlights how preferences for rare phenotypes and fluctuating selection due to heterogeneity in signaling conditions may contribute to the maintenance of the polymorphism found in male color patterns.
History
Journal
Behavioral ecologyVolume
28Issue
3Pagination
833 - 843Publisher
Oxford University PressLocation
Oxford, EnglandPublisher DOI
ISSN
1045-2249eISSN
1465-7279Language
engPublication classification
C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
The Author 2017Usage metrics
Categories
Keywords
color pattern polymorphismmate choicemate preferenceontogenyPoecilia reticulatasocial environmentScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineBehavioral SciencesBiologyEcologyZoologyLife Sciences & Biomedicine - Other TopicsEnvironmental Sciences & EcologySEXUAL SELECTIONMATING PREFERENCESINBREEDING DEPRESSIONPOPULATION DIVERGENCEPOECILIA-RETICULATACOLOR PATTERNSMALE TRAITSMALESBEHAVIORFAMILIARITYEvolutionary BiologyZoologyEcology