Abstract

The traditional view of sexual selection has been that of competing males and choosy females; however, more recently it has been recognized that males mayexhibit mate choice when females vary in quality and when males suffer costs associated with mating. Sexually cannibalistic mating systems provide an opportunitytoexaminemalematechoicefurther:thehighcostspotentiallyinvolvedinthematingprocess for males, as well as variation in female quality, predict male mate choice. We used the praying mantid Pseudomantis albo! mbriata to determine the effect of female body condition on male mate choice in a system with frequent precopulatory sexual cannibalism. Female body condition is positively correlated with fecundity and negatively correlated with the propensity to cannibalize, so we predicted males would strongly prefer females in good condition to maximize their reproductive potential. Results of our simultaneouschoicetestsshowedthatmalesusechemicalandvisualcuesformatelocationandassessment,and that theycan use eitherof these sensory modalities to distinguish and choose between females differing in body condition, with a signi! cant preference for good-condition females. However, surprisingly, males rarely rejected poor-condition females in the more ecologically relevant scenario of only one immediate potential mate and both sensory modes available to them, which may be explained by the strong scramble competition known for praying mantid systems. These results show that even when female quality varies and the cost of mating for males is substantial, male mate rejection does not always evolve. Crown Copyright ! 2010. Published on behalf of The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call