Abstract

BackgroundIntrasexual competition over access to resources can lead to aggression between individuals. Because overt aggression, i.e. fights, can be costly for contestants, the communication of aggressive motivation prior to engagement in a physical fight is often mediated by conventional signals. Animals of various taxa, including fishes, display visual signals such as body coloration that can dynamically be adjusted depending on the individual’s motivation. Male individuals of the West African cichlid Pelvicachromis taeniatus express a yellow body coloration displayed during courtship but also in an intrasexual competition context.ResultsWithin-individual variation in male yellow body coloration, as quantified with standardized digital photography and representation in a CIELab color space, was examined in a mating context by exposing males to a female and in a competitive intrasexual context, i.e. in a dyadic contest. Additionally, spectrometric reflectance measurements were taken to obtain color representations in a physiological color space based on spectral sensitivities of our model species. Exposure to females did not significantly affect male color expression. However, analysis of body coloration revealed a change in within-individual color intensity and colored area after interaction with a male competitor. In dominant males, extension of coloration was positively correlated with restrained aggression, i.e. displays, which in turn explained dominance established between the two contestants.ConclusionBody coloration in male P. taeniatus is a dynamic signal that is used in concert with display behavior in communication during intrasexual competition.

Highlights

  • Intrasexual competition over access to resources can lead to aggression between individuals

  • Males were presented a competitor in a dyadic contest to observe aggressive and submissive behavior in combination with possibly changing intensity and extension of body coloration. Both yellow intensity of male ventral coloration, i.e. Labchromaticity (LC) and the relative colored area (RCA) measured before trials did not differ significantly when compared between the two contexts (LC: Wilcoxon rank sum test, W = 740, n = 83, p = 0.313; RCA: Welch two sample t-test, t = -1.285, df = 68.253, p = 0.203)

  • Body coloration of male Pelvicachromis taeniatus was quantified based on digital photography and additional reflectance spectrometric measurements combined with visual modeling

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Summary

Introduction

Intrasexual competition over access to resources can lead to aggression between individuals. Subordinate individuals might try to seek access to resources by challenging dominant individuals, which are in turn aggressively defending their territory. Overt aggression such as physical attacks and fights, Body coloration as a visual signal in social and sexual contexts has been investigated in several invertebrates [e.g. 7–9] and vertebrates [e.g. 10–14], including different fish species [e.g. 15–19]. The reliability of color signals is often ambiguous [3], in certain cases, they can function as an honest signal [23] This is especially true for coloration based on carotenoids, whose production is energetically costly as vertebrates cannot synthesize carotenoids themselves, and indicates the physical condition of an individual [24]. Individuals can use display of carotenoid-based coloration to communicate their aggressiveness, threat and fighting potential towards a competitor [3, 25]

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