Abstract

We examine a simple model of state-dependent (indicator) traits that focuses on their evolutionary origins as courtship signals. A necessary condition for the initial evolution of signals was found: the marginal female preference for minimal traits must exceed a certain threshold, where that threshold is proportional to the marginal male fitness costs for minimal traits. We interpret a positive threshold as implying a need for preexisting sensory bias in order to overcome the threshold if indicator signals are to start to evolve. We extend the model to allow for the possibility that signal costs and female preferences may vary over evolutionary time. If there is independent information on the way that signaling costs have evolved, then one may use measurements of contemporary female preferences to make inferences concerning the presence of the ancestral threshold. It is the marginal female preferences for minimal male traits that are important, whereas reconstructing ancestral origins from measurement of average size signals is not informative. Our analyses suggest two foci for future studies: measurement of the marginal response of contemporary females to minimal male signals and reconstruction of how signaling costs have changed over evolutionary time.

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