Published on 01 July 2011 |
Data from: Birdsong performance and the evolution of simple (rather than elaborate) sexual signals
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Sexual signals are often elaborate, due to sexual selection for signals of individual quality. Contrary to expectation, however, the elaboration of signals such as birdsong is not related to the strength of sexual selection across species. With a comparative study across wood warblers (family Parulidae), we show a compromise between advertising the performance of trills (syllable repetitions) and song complexity, which can result in the evolution of simple, rather than elaborate, song. Species with higher trill performance evolved simple songs with more extensive trilled syntax. This advertises trill performance, but reduces syllable diversity in songs. These two traits are commonly sexually selected in songbirds, but indexes of sexual selection were not related to either in wood warblers. This is consistent with sexual selection targeting different traits in different species, sometimes resulting in simple signals. We conclude that the evolution of sexual signals can be unpredictable when their physiology affords multiple or, as here, opposing ways of advertising individual quality.
Citations (2)
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-018-2605-4MDC OpenAlex
Cited on 19 January 2019
Weight: 1.73
- https://doi.org/10.1086/662160DataCite MDC
Cited on 01 November 2011
Weight: 1.00
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Publication Details
Subfield
Developmental Biology
Field
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Domain
Life Sciences
Confidence Score
98%
Source
Open Alex