Abstract

The reproductive behaviour of a population of individually marked toads Bufo bufo was studied at a pond where males outnumbered females by between four and five to one. There was intense competition between the males for mates and only 20·5 % of them bred successfully. Of the successful males, 38·5 % got mates by fighting and displacing other males from the backs of females (takeovers). Larger males enjoyed greater reproductive success because they were stronger and better able to achieve takeovers. When competing for females, some males searched at the spawn site while others searched away from spawn. The numbers searching in the two areas can be predicted by a model which assumes that unpaired males distribute themselves so that there is a spatial ESS, where individuals have equal expectations of finding a female both at and away from the spawning ground.

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