Sire attractiveness influences offspring performance in guppies

According to the good-genes hypothesis, females choose among males to ensure the inheritance of superior paternal genes by their offspring. Despite increasing support for this prediction, in some cases differential (non-genetic) maternal effects may obscure or amplify the relationship between patern...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2004-10, Vol.271 (1552), p.2035-2042
Hauptverfasser: Evans, Jonathan P., Kelley, Jennifer L., Bisazza, Angelo, Finazzo, Elisabetta, Pilastro, Andrea
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container_issue 1552
container_start_page 2035
container_title Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences
container_volume 271
creator Evans, Jonathan P.
Kelley, Jennifer L.
Bisazza, Angelo
Finazzo, Elisabetta
Pilastro, Andrea
description According to the good-genes hypothesis, females choose among males to ensure the inheritance of superior paternal genes by their offspring. Despite increasing support for this prediction, in some cases differential (non-genetic) maternal effects may obscure or amplify the relationship between paternal attractiveness and offspring quality. Artificial insemination controls such effects because it uncouples mate choice from copulation, therefore denying females the opportunity of assessing male attractiveness. We adopted this technique in the live-bearing fish Poecilia reticulata and examined whether paternal coloration was associated with the behavioural performance of newborn offspring. Sexually receptive virgin females were inseminated with sperm taken individually from donor males that exhibited high variation in the area of orange pigmentation, a trait known to influence female choice in the study population. Our analysis of offspring performance focused on the anti-predator behaviour of newborn fish, including schooling by sibling pairs, the response (swimming speed) of these fishes to a simulated avian predator, and the time taken for a naive investigator to capture the offspring. Although we found no significant effect of sire coloration on either schooling or swimming speed, our analysis revealed a significant positive association between sire coloration and the ability of newborn offspring to evade capture. This finding supports the view that at least one aspect of anti-predator behaviour in newborn offspring is influenced by sire genotype, which in turn is revealed by the expression of secondary sexual traits.
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source MEDLINE; PubMed Central; JSTOR
subjects Animals
Animals, Newborn
Birds
Choice Behavior - physiology
Colors
Differential Allocation
Female
Female animals
Freshwater
Genetic Benefits
Guppy
Indirect Benefits
Insemination
Insemination, Artificial
Male
Male animals
Mating behavior
Phenotypic traits
Pigmentation - physiology
Poecilia - physiology
Poecilia reticulata
Predation
Sexual Behavior, Animal - physiology
Sexual Selection
Skin Pigmentation
Sperm Competition
Spermatozoa
Swimming
Swimming - physiology
title Sire attractiveness influences offspring performance in guppies
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