Abstract

Acoustic and visual signals like mating calls or colour patterns, which are involved in courtship displays, can be affected by the health status of an individual. For example, infection with parasites can result in sexual signals that are less intense or conspicuous than in healthy individuals; thus it is generally assumed that sexual signals indicate the quality of the holder. We use strawberry poison frogs from Costa Rica to find out (1) whether there is variation in the parasite load among individuals, (2) whether the parasite load varies over time, (3) whether the parasite load has an effect on acoustic and visual signals, which are supposed to be important for female mate choice and (4) whether the parasite load influences the reproductive behaviour. We found that 60 % of our focal males were infested with an intestinal nematode of the genus Cosmocerca while the parasite load changed considerably over time. We found slight associations between the intensity of acoustic signals (advertisement calls), visual signals (colour and brightness contrasts) and parasite load. Non-infected males produced significantly lower pulse rates than parasitised males. As pulse rate has been shown to decrease with age, we suggest that males without parasites become older than infected males. Moreover, the visual contrasts of the frogs varied across natural backgrounds. An interaction between parasite infection and the background of the calling place affected the ventral colour contrast. This finding suggests that at least some males without parasites defend calling places that render them more conspicuousness to conspecifics than other potential positions would. There were no differences in several elements of reproductive behaviour between parasitised and healthy males. Further studies are necessary to find out whether parasite infection varies among populations, and whether at higher levels it would have a stronger influence on sexual signals, behaviour and lifetime fitness.

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