Abstract

Sexual traits can serve as honest indicators of phenotypic quality when they are costly. Brightly coloured yellow to red traits, which are pigmented by carotenoids, are relatively common in birds, and feature in sexual selection. Carotenoids have been linked to immune and antioxidant function, and the trade-off between ornamentation and these physiological functions provides a potential mechanism rendering carotenoid based signals costly. Mutual ornamentation is also common in birds and can be maintained by mutual mate choice for this ornament or by a correlated response in one sex to selection on the other sex. When selection pressures differ between the sexes this can cause intralocus sexual conflict. Sexually antagonistic selection pressures have been demonstrated for few sexual traits, and for carotenoid-dependent traits there is a single example: bill redness was found to be positively associated with survival and reproductive output in male zebra finches, but negatively so in females. We retested these associations in our captive zebra finch population without two possible limitations of this earlier study. Contrary to the earlier findings, we found no evidence for sexually antagonistic selection. In both sexes, individuals with redder bills showed higher survival. This association disappeared among the females with the reddest bills. Furthermore, females with redder bills achieved higher reproductive output. We conclude that bill redness of male and female zebra finches honestly signals phenotypic quality, and discuss the possible causes of the differences between our results and earlier findings.

Highlights

  • Sexual traits can serve as indicators of quality and require costs to facilitate honest signalling [1,2]

  • Most genes are carried across generations in both males and females, but the selection pressures acting on these genes can differ in strength and even in sign between the sexes, i.e. sexually antagonistic selection

  • Contrary to the results of Price & Burley we found no evidence for sexually antagonistic selection: individuals with redder bills of both sexes showed higher survival, and females with redder bills achieved higher fledgling production

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Summary

Introduction

Sexual traits can serve as indicators of quality and require costs to facilitate honest signalling [1,2]. Red and yellow secondary sexual traits are found throughout vertebrates and are relatively common, especially in birds [3]. Carotenoid-dependent traits may signal phenotypic quality by advertising the ability to allocate carotenoids away from physiological functions towards sexual colouration. Ornamentation of both sexes is relatively common in birds. Mutual mate choice can maintain the ornamentation of both sexes [12] It can be maintained via a correlated response to selection on the other sex [12], which can cause intralocus sexual conflict [13,14,15].

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