Walker-Bolton Amber D, Parga Joyce A
Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Anthropology, California State University, Los Angeles, California.
Am J Primatol. 2017 Dec;79(12). doi: 10.1002/ajp.22724. Epub 2017 Nov 15.
Sexual selection for honest behavioral displays of quality has driven the development of remarkably complex courtship behavior in many animal species. Olfactory displays are often overlooked as an area of inquiry compared to auditory and visual displays. Ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta) scent marking of substrates has been studied extensively, although the male olfactory displays of anointing and wafting tails to females has received relatively little attention. We studied the role of male olfactory displays to females, evaluating whether such signals function as honest, costly signals of male dominance status in two groups of wild L. catta at Berenty Reserve, Madagascar. Our results suggest that male tail anointing and tail wafting displays to pre-estrous and estrous females are correlated with male dominance rank, and moreover appear to operate as costly signals, as such displays increase aggression received from males and females while other types of scent marking do not. Furthermore, females showed greater mating preference (as measured by sexual presents) for resident males who performed the "anoint tail" and "waft tail" displays towards them. When males perform the "anoint tail" and "waft tail" displays to females, they receive higher levels of aggression than if they were to perform other types of scent marking. Interestingly, immigrating (peripheral) males performed the "anoint tail" and "waft tail" displays at higher rates than resident males, which could honestly indicate their quality or may simply be associated with the alternative mating strategy of transferring between groups to gain mating opportunities. Our finding that tail anointing and tail wafting displays function as honest signals of dominance for resident males-and that these costly displays appear to positively affect female mate choice-is the first evidence of this function for this particular olfactory signal in L. catta.
对优质行为的诚实展示进行性选择,推动了许多动物物种中极其复杂求偶行为的发展。与听觉和视觉展示相比,嗅觉展示往往被忽视,未被作为一个研究领域。环尾狐猴(Lemur catta)在底物上的气味标记已得到广泛研究,不过雄性向雌性涂抹并摆动尾巴的嗅觉展示相对较少受到关注。我们研究了雄性对雌性的嗅觉展示的作用,评估这些信号是否作为马达加斯加贝伦蒂自然保护区两组野生环尾狐猴中雄性优势地位的诚实、代价高昂的信号发挥作用。我们的结果表明,雄性向处于发情前期和发情期的雌性进行的尾巴涂抹和尾巴摆动展示与雄性优势等级相关,而且似乎作为代价高昂的信号发挥作用,因为此类展示会增加来自雄性和雌性的攻击,而其他类型的气味标记则不会。此外,雌性对向它们进行“涂抹尾巴”和“摆动尾巴”展示的常驻雄性表现出更大的交配偏好(以性礼物衡量)。当雄性向雌性进行“涂抹尾巴”和“摆动尾巴”展示时,它们比进行其他类型的气味标记时会受到更高程度的攻击。有趣的是,迁入(边缘)雄性进行“涂抹尾巴”和“摆动尾巴”展示的频率高于常驻雄性,这可能诚实地表明了它们的品质,或者可能仅仅与通过在群体间转移以获得交配机会的替代交配策略有关。我们发现尾巴涂抹和尾巴摆动展示对常驻雄性而言作为优势的诚实信号发挥作用——而且这些代价高昂的展示似乎对雌性配偶选择产生了积极影响——这是环尾狐猴中这种特定嗅觉信号具有此功能的首个证据。