Mate preference of female blue tits varies with experimental photoperiod

Organisms use environmental cues to time their life-cycles and among these cues, photoperiod is the main trigger of reproductive behaviours such as territory defence or song activity. Whether photoperiod is also important for another behaviour closely associated with reproduction, mate choice, is un...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2014-03, Vol.9 (3), p.e92527-e92527
Hauptverfasser: Reparaz, Laura B, van Oers, Kees, Naguib, Marc, Doutrelant, Claire, Visser, Marcel E, Caro, Samuel P
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van Oers, Kees
Naguib, Marc
Doutrelant, Claire
Visser, Marcel E
Caro, Samuel P
description Organisms use environmental cues to time their life-cycles and among these cues, photoperiod is the main trigger of reproductive behaviours such as territory defence or song activity. Whether photoperiod is also important for another behaviour closely associated with reproduction, mate choice, is unknown. In many bird species, mate choice occurs at two different times during the annual cycle that strongly differ in daylength: in late winter when photoperiod is short and social mates are chosen, and again around egg-laying when photoperiod is longer and extra-pair mates are chosen. This duality makes the role that photoperiod plays on mate choice behaviours intriguing. We investigated the effect of photoperiod on mate choice using three experimental photoperiodic treatments (9 L:15 D, 14 L:10 D, 18 L:6 D), using blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus) as a biological model. We show that female choice was stronger under long photoperiods. In addition, female blue tits spent significantly more time near males with long tarsi and long wings. This latter preference was only expressed under long photoperiods, suggesting that some indices of male quality only become significant to females when they are strongly photostimulated, and therefore that females could select their social and extra-pair mates based on different phenotypic traits. These results shed light on the roles that photoperiod may play in stimulating pair-bonding and in refining female selectivity for male traits.
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subjects Animal behavior
Animal biology
Animal communication
Animal sciences
Animals
Biodiversity and Ecology
Biology and Life Sciences
Birds
Birds - physiology
body-size
Cues
Cyanistes caeruleus
Daylength
Ecology
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Egg laying
Environmental Sciences
european starlings
extrapair paternity
Female
Females
genetic-variation
Global Changes
great tits
Life Sciences
Male
Males
Mate selection
Mating Preference, Animal - physiology
Organ Size
parus-caeruleus populations
Personality
Photoperiod
Photoperiods
plumage coloration
Preferences
Quantitative Trait, Heritable
Reproduction (biology)
Reproductive Biology
reproductive-performance
Seasons
Selectivity
sexually selected trait
Song
Territory
Wings
Wings, Animal - anatomy & histology
Winter
title Mate preference of female blue tits varies with experimental photoperiod
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