Abstract

Over the last years, several studies suggested that male courtship activity is more important than female preference for male secondary sexual traits in determining male mating success in the butterfly Bicyclus anynana. We use Kehl et al. (Front Zool 12, 2015)'s study and related publications, to highlight three methodological and conceptual aspects of laboratory experiments that distort the social environment compared to natural conditions. We argue that such experimental biases prevent the expression of female mate choice and artificially inflate the role of male activity in determining mating success. We really want to stress that any work performed in laboratory conditions using extreme cage densities or sizes impedes female mate choice and promotes male-male competition when sexual conflict occurs about mating decisions. Hence, such studies, and the derived conclusions, are only applicable to ecologically-irrelevant conditions and cannot be extrapolated to more natural laboratory or field conditions. Our concerns may be relevant to many behavioural studies quantifying sexual selection across taxa. This commentary adds to the increasing scientific awareness that: i) mating outcome is, across taxa, the result of a sexual conflict whose outcome is under female, and not male, control; ii) the social environment used to quantify mating success is of utmost importance to produce reliable estimates of the strength and the direction of sexual selection on sexually-selected traits, as they evolve in nature.

Highlights

  • Over the last years, several studies suggested that male courtship activity is more important than female preference for male secondary sexual traits in determining male mating success in the butterfly Bicyclus anynana

  • Fischer and his team have produced over the last years several studies in which they suggest that male behaviour, and in particular persistence in courtship activity (e.g. [1,2,3,4], reviewed in [5, 6]), is more important than female preference for male secondary sexual traits [7, 8]in driving male mating success in the butterfly Bicyclus anynana

  • The social environment used to quantify sexual selection is of utmost importance to produce reliable estimates of the strength and the direction of selection on sexually-selected traits as they evolve in nature [10]

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Summary

Introduction

Several studies suggested that male courtship activity is more important than female preference for male secondary sexual traits in determining male mating success in the butterfly Bicyclus anynana. We have recently shown both by a quantitative synthesis across all B. anynana publications on mating success [6] and by experimental work [5] that such artificial social environments prevent the expression of female mate choice and overestimate the importance of male courtship activity on mating outcome.

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