Department of Biology, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge CB1 1PT, UK
Ecology & Evolution, Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia.
Biol Lett. 2018 Jan;14(1). doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2017.0695.
Males often produce dynamic, repetitive courtship displays that can be demanding to perform and might advertise male quality to females. A key feature of demanding displays is that they can change in intensity: escalating as a male increases his signalling effort, but de-escalating as a signaller becomes fatigued. Here, we investigated whether female fiddler crabs, , are sensitive to changes in male courtship wave rate. We performed playback experiments using robotic male crabs that had the same mean wave rate, but either escalated, de-escalated or remained constant. Females demonstrated a strong preference for escalating robots, but showed mixed responses to robots that de-escalated ('fast' to 'slow') compared to those that waved at a constant 'medium' rate. These findings demonstrate that females can discern changes in male display rate, and prefer males that escalate, but that females are also sensitive to past display rates indicative of prior vigour.
雄性通常会表现出充满活力且重复的求偶行为,这些行为可能难以完成,并且可能向雌性展示雄性的质量。高要求展示的一个关键特征是,它们的强度可以改变:随着雄性增加信号传递的努力,强度增加,但随着信号传递者疲劳,强度降低。在这里,我们研究了雌性招潮蟹是否对雄性求偶波率的变化敏感。我们使用具有相同平均波率的机器雄蟹进行回放实验,但这些雄蟹的波率要么增加,要么减少,要么保持不变。与波率保持“中等”的机器雄蟹相比,雌性蟹对波率增加的机器雄蟹表现出强烈的偏好,但对波率减少(“快”到“慢”)的机器雄蟹反应不一。这些发现表明,雌性可以辨别雄性展示率的变化,并偏爱那些波率增加的雄性,但雌性也对过去显示出活力的展示率敏感。