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Strategic concealment of sexual identity in an estrildid finch
One explanation for the evolution of sexual monomorphism is the sexual indistinguishability hypothesis, which argues that in group-living species individuals might benefit by concealing their sex to reduce sexual competition. We tested this hypothesis in long-tailed finches Poephila acuticauda. Males and females could not be reliably distinguished morphologically or by analysis of the reflectance spectra (300-700 nm) from the plumage and bill. Males seemed unable to distinguish the sex of an unfamiliar individual in the absence of behavioural cues; they were equally likely to court and copulate with unfamiliar males and females but rarely courted familiar males. Here we report the first experimental evidence that sexual monomorphism enables strategic concealment of sex. Males were more likely to reveal their sex when faced with a solitary unfamiliar individual than a group of unfamiliar individuals. When encountering an unfamiliar male that revealed his sex, subordinate males were more likely to conceal their sex than dominant males.
History
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London series B-biological sciencesVolume
266Issue
1419Pagination
543 - 550Publisher
The Royal Society PublishingLocation
London, EnglandISSN
0962-8452eISSN
1471-2954Language
engPublication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
1999, The Royal SocietyUsage metrics
Categories
Keywords
monomorphismdimorphismsex recognitionsexual indistinguishabilityspectral reflectancesexual mimcryScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineBiologyEcologyEvolutionary BiologyLife Sciences & Biomedicine - Other TopicsEnvironmental Sciences & Ecologysexual mimicryFEMALE-MIMICRYPLUMAGE COLORFICEDULA-HYPOLEUCARECOGNITIONHYPOTHESISEVOLUTIONBIRD