Potential direct fitness consequences of ornament-based mate choice in a butterfly

Female mate choice has been shown to provide direct mating benefits in several animal groups. In butterflies, for which there are increasing reports of fine-scale color-based mate choice, the evolutionary benefits that accrue from such mating biases, if any, are largely unknown. We addressed this is...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioral ecology and sociobiology 2008-04, Vol.62 (6), p.1017-1026
Hauptverfasser: Kemp, Darrell J, Macedonia, Joseph M, Ball, Tamara S, Rutowski, Ronald L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Female mate choice has been shown to provide direct mating benefits in several animal groups. In butterflies, for which there are increasing reports of fine-scale color-based mate choice, the evolutionary benefits that accrue from such mating biases, if any, are largely unknown. We addressed this issue in the butterfly Colias eurytheme, a species in which females choose mates on the basis of iridescent ultraviolet (UV) wing ornamentation and in which males donate reproductively beneficial nuptial gifts. In the first experiment, we assessed the mass of gifts donated to 77 virgin females by males sampled directly from a field encounter site. Despite large variance in the male adult phenotype and ejaculate, no single aspect of dorsal wing coloration, including UV brightness, chroma, or hue, was related to ejaculate mass. There was, however, an interesting interaction between the effects of male body size and copula duration upon ejaculate mass, with size scaling positively with ejaculate mass among males involved in shorter copulations (those lasting
ISSN:0340-5443
1432-0762
DOI:10.1007/s00265-007-0529-5