Wagner WE
Nebraska Behavioral Biology Group, School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Anim Behav. 1998 Apr;55(4):1029-42. doi: 10.1006/anbe.1997.0635.
Interest in the evolution of female mating preferences has increased greatly in recent years, and numerous hypotheses have been proposed to explain how mating preferences evolve. Despite this interest, little is known about how selection acts on mating preferences in natural populations. One reason for this lack of information may be that experimental designs commonly used for testing female preferences make it difficult to quantify the preferences of individual females. Most commonly used designs share three features: they examine the preferences of populations of females, they test female responses when they are presented simultaneously with two stimuli, and they infer information on female preferences by observing female choices between alternative stimuli. Population-level choice tests, in which each female is tested only once with a set of stimuli, do not evaluate within-female variation in preference, which is necessary to document between-female variation in preference. Two-stimulus designs test only for directional preferences if female responses are tested with only a single pair of stimuli. In addition, dichotomous scoring of female responses makes detection of between-female variation in preference difficult. Simultaneous stimulus presentations can confound female preference and female sampling behaviour. An alternative method to assess female preferences is to measure repeatedly the preference functions of individual females using a single-stimulus design. The shape of a female's preference function indicates how a female's mating response varies with male trait value, and repeated measures of individual preference functions allow measurement of within- and between-female variation in preferences. Copyright 1998 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Copyright 1998 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
近年来,人们对雌性交配偏好的进化的兴趣大增,并且已经提出了许多假说来解释交配偏好是如何进化的。尽管有这种兴趣,但对于自然种群中选择如何作用于交配偏好却知之甚少。缺乏这方面信息的一个原因可能是,常用于测试雌性偏好的实验设计难以量化个体雌性的偏好。最常用的设计有三个共同特征:它们研究雌性群体的偏好,在同时呈现两种刺激时测试雌性的反应,并且通过观察雌性在不同刺激之间的选择来推断有关雌性偏好的信息。在群体水平的选择测试中,每个雌性只用一组刺激测试一次,这种测试无法评估雌性内部偏好的变化,而这种变化对于记录雌性之间偏好的差异是必要的。如果只用一对刺激测试雌性反应,双刺激设计仅测试定向偏好。此外,对雌性反应进行二分法评分使得检测雌性之间偏好的差异变得困难。同时呈现刺激可能会混淆雌性偏好和雌性采样行为。评估雌性偏好的另一种方法是使用单刺激设计反复测量个体雌性的偏好函数。雌性偏好函数的形状表明雌性的交配反应如何随雄性特征值而变化,对个体偏好函数的重复测量可以测量雌性内部和雌性之间偏好的变化。版权所有1998动物行为研究协会。版权所有1998动物行为研究协会。