Published on 20 July 2011 |
Data from: Recent social history alters male courtship preferences
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Phenotypically plastic mating behaviour may allow males to modify their reproductive behaviour to suit the prevailing social conditions, but we do not know if males only react to immediate social stimuli or change their inherent mate preferences according to their social history. Here we examine the effect of social experiences on the subsequent reproductive behaviour of male guppies under standard conditions, allowing us to distinguish the effect of past and immediate social conditions. Males experienced experimental conditioning periods during which they interacted with three females, either of variable size or of similar size. Females arrived either simultaneously or consecutively. In subsequent standard assays, only males that had experienced females of variable size preferentially courted large females. Further, males exposed to sequential female arrival courted subsequent females more vigorously than males that had experienced simultaneous female arrival. In contrast, males did not alter their coercive mating attempts in relation to their recent social history. These results demonstrate that males use past experiences to modify their subsequent reproductive behaviour rather than reacting only to immediate stimuli, and reveal the sophisticated ways in which males alter their reproductive tactics to suit the social environment and maximise fitness across changing selective landscapes.
Citations (1)
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.2011.01421.xDataCite MDC
Cited on 29 July 2011
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Publication Details
Subfield
Gender Studies
Field
Social Sciences
Domain
Social Sciences
Confidence Score
46%
Source
Scholar Data Model