Abstract

AbstractThe function of female ornamentation in (inter)sexual selection is attracting increasing attention, but empirical field studies are mostly based on indirect measures such as mating patterns; direct evidence of male mate preference on female ornamentation while controlling for confounding factors is needed. Here, we performed model presentation experiments to study male mate preference in the barn swallowHirundo rustica,a model species of sexual selection. Although female tails are shorter than male tails in the barn swallow, they are still long and indicate female quality, possibly due to the differential costs of ornamentation. Although many correlational and experimental studies of live females have focused on long tails in female barn swallows over the last three decades, direct behavioral tests of male mate preference are lacking. In our sequential model presentation experiment, in which we repeated the trials with the same males, we found that males significantly reduced the number of pairing displays when presented with tail‐elongated female models compared to controls. The interaction between treatment and male tail length was far from significant. The observed pattern is inconsistent with the prevailing view that female ornamentation is maintained via male preference for more ornamented females; rather, it is consistent with the sexual mimicry hypothesis, in which females can avoid sexual and social harassment by mimicking males.

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