Abstract

Most studies on ungulate reproduction have focused on the covariates of male reproductive success, while there is much less information on female tactics of mate choice. The aim of this work is to fill this gap and to assess condition-dependent variations in female tactics in a lekking fallow deer (Dama dama) population. In particular, we investigated three indirect selection mechanisms: i) aggregation: when females join an already formed female group; ii) copying: when females copy the mate choice of other females and iii) territory choice: when females select a territory where many copulations had previously occurred. Our results show that female fallow deer, which are less experienced (younger) and/or incur higher travel costs (home range far from the lek), adopt indirect forms of mate selection more often than older females or females residing near the lek, respectively. Compared to adults, younger females remained longer in the lek (almost three times) and in male territories, returning to the lek after copulation. However, despite the time spent at the lek, younger females were not able to select the highest-rank males, and relied on territory choice more often than older females. Farther does visited the lek less frequently (farthest females only once) and arrived on average 5 days later than closer females (which performed up to 7 visits), but they were seen more often within female groups (aggregation). We did not find a different amount of copying in younger or in farther females. Our results contribute to advance our understanding of female behaviours in ungulate leks.

Highlights

  • Most studies on ungulate reproduction have focused on the covariates of male reproductive success, while there is much less information on female tactics of mate choice

  • For each animal we computed the distance between the centre of its home range and the lek and we considered this value as a proxy for costs borne by females to mate in the lek

  • There was no relation between copulation date and distance, while we found that younger females mated later than adult females (M8, Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Most studies on ungulate reproduction have focused on the covariates of male reproductive success, while there is much less information on female tactics of mate choice. Our results show that female fallow deer, which are less experienced (younger) and/or incur higher travel costs (home range far from the lek), adopt indirect forms of mate selection more often than older females or females residing near the lek, respectively. Despite the time spent at the lek, younger females were not able to select the highest-rank males, and relied on territory choice more often than older females. Male assemblages called “choruses” are observed in several acoustically advertising taxa such as anurans[10] and orthopterans[11] Lekking birds such as the ruff (Philomachus pugnax12), black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix4), and manakins (Chiroxiphia lanceolata13) differ in how competition and mate choice contribute to female fitness. The best-of-n decision rule is based on direct www.nature.com/scientificreports comparisons of males, which do not require the assessment of an absolute score for each individual encountered, while the fixed threshold rule requires that a female is able to evaluate male quality on an absolute scale

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