Data from: Do male fish prefer them big and colourful? Non-random male courtship effort in a viviparous fish with negligible paternal investment
In the majority of sexual species, there are asymmetries in reproductive effort, with males typically investing more in securing matings and females investing more in producing offspring. This causes males to mate less discriminately than females. Yet males may also become choosy if the following co...
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Zusammenfassung: | In the majority of sexual species, there are asymmetries in reproductive
effort, with males typically investing more in securing matings and
females investing more in producing offspring. This causes males to mate
less discriminately than females. Yet males may also become choosy if the
following conditions are met: (a) that females vary in their reproductive
value, (b) that males can perceive this variation, and (c) that mating
with one female reduces the possibility of mating with another. These
conditions may be met in the livebearing Goodeidae, a clade of Mexican
fish whose females are often brightly coloured and whose males display
costly ornaments and courtship as the only means to obtain matings. Males
of the black-finned goodeid (Girardinichthys viviparus) have relatively
simple, yet costly courtship behaviour, with mating probability depending
on the duration of one-to-one courtship episodes, thus by courting one
female they must ignore others. We evaluated whether the decision to court
a female depends on her phenotype. Three variables of female phenotype
were positively linked to the duration of male visits and to the frequency
of displays performed by males: belly area, hue (“orangeness”) and size.
Since fecundity and offspring survival were also a positive function of
female size, we conclude that male G. viviparus evaluate the potential
female reproductive value and allocate their courtship effort accordingly.
Since male courtship effort is also influenced by female colouration, we
suggest that our findings may help explaining the recurrent evolution of
sexually dimorphic female colouration in this clade. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.9s380 |