Abstract

Condition-dependence is considered as a dominant mechanism ensuring the fitness benefits of continued mate choice for heritable sexual signal traits, but crucial questions remain concerning the underlying physiological pathways. For example, it is unclear whether condition-dependence is mediated by the different amount of resource obtained, some uncheatable functional link with nutritional status, or the adverse effect of nutritional stress experienced by some individuals. Furthermore, the pattern of change in nutritional reserves in relation to ornamental traits has recently been proposed as a critical pillar of the condition-dependence concept, but this pattern is virtually unknown in natural populations. We quantified separate measures for actual body condition, lipid reserve accumulation rate, and lipid reserve depletion, and applied these measures to two white plumage ornaments of male collared flycatchers during courtship, during nestling rearing, and before the summer moult. Neither actual condition nor reserve accumulation rate before moult predicted the subsequent change of ornament sizes, but reserve depletion was accompanied by the reduction of forehead patch size to the following year. Wing patch size, a trait important in territoriality, was negatively related to both reserve accumulation and reserve depletion in the courtship period, but not related to current condition. Finally, irrespective of breeding phase, measures of current condition, and recent nutritional reserve depletion were negatively correlated, but both were unrelated to resource accumulation rate. These results indicate that measuring nutritional reserve trajectories in addition to actual condition may reveal functionally important processes underlying signal-condition correlations.Significance statementOrnamental signal characters are known to convey honest information to signal receivers through their dependence on nutritional condition. Here, we show that such signals can also indicate the temporal trends of condition. We examine plumage patch sizes and separate measures of actual condition, nutritional reserve accumulation, and nutritional reserve depletion in three contexts: during courtship, during nestling rearing, and before the summer moult. The results suggest nutritional stress effects on signal expression, and predictable reserve dynamics in relation to signal expression, thereby highlighting the usefulness of dynamic nutritional measures in clarifying the fundamental concept of condition-dependent signalling.

Highlights

  • Sexual ornaments are typically under directional selection imposed by mating preferences (Hoekstra et al 2001; Siepielski et al 2009)

  • We examine plumage patch sizes and separate measures of actual condition, nutritional reserve accumulation, and nutritional reserve depletion in three contexts: Communicated by A

  • We looked at relationships between current condition and metabolites at nestling rearing and the subsequent change of patch sizes for the following year

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Summary

Introduction

Sexual ornaments are typically under directional selection imposed by mating preferences (Hoekstra et al 2001; Siepielski et al 2009) This selection is in the direction of greater trait exaggeration which is in turn expected to give rise to increased production, maintenance, or wearing costs of ornamentation (Jennions et al 2001). Condition-dependence of ornamentation plays fundamental roles in ensuring the fitness benefits of mate choice because it may link ornament expression to direct benefits of various sorts (avoidance of diseases, territory quality, parental contribution etc., Møller and Jennions 2001; Hegyi et al 2015), and to genetic benefits (Møller and Alatalo 1999; Prokop et al 2012), for example via the additive genetic variance of condition (Bgenic capture^, Rowe and Houle 1996). It is not surprising that condition-dependence has become a central concept in sexual selection research

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