Female preference for dynamic traits in the green swordtail, Xiphophorus helleri
GIL G. ROSENTHAL, CHRISTOPHER S. EVANS & WILLIAM L. MILLER
Analyses of the relationship between
female preference and male behaviour have been complicated by correlated variation
in factors such as male size and appearance. This study examined the effects
of systematically manipulating male behaviour, while holding male morphology
constant. Female green swordtails were shown vide-recorded sequences of the
same male engaging in an active courtship display, performing similar levels
of feeding activity, and remaining inactive. Control sequences of moving food
particles and of an empty aquarium were also presented. Female responsiveness
was significantly different across time intervals (before, during and after
the stimulus) for the three stimuli showing a male, but not for the two controls.
Analyses of female behaviour patterns during the stimulus presentations revealed
that they preferred sequences of courting males to all other stimuli. Females
did not respond differently to the feeding and inactive sequences. These results
indicate that female interest depends upon a specific set of motor patterns,
and suggest that male behaviour and morphology may act synergistically to determine
female preference. Video stimuli should prove useful in future experiments seeking
to identify the role of specific courtship motor patterns in mate choice.
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