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Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier
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Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish

Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001)

Summarized by Dr. Gier

Page 2: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

Preview:A test of the function of female ornamentation using an experimental approach.

Page 3: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

The Question:Male ornamentation is well-understood.

…but what about the females?Ornamentation is more rare, and more mysterious.

Page 4: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

Three hypotheses for female ornamentation:• Genetic by-products of selection on males• Female-female competition• Male mate choice

Fish often have ornamented females, and are thus ideal model systems to test these hypotheses.

Page 5: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

Study system:Two-spotted goby, Gobiusculus flavescens

Ideal for study: females vary in ornamentation (orange belly or not) and in shape (rounded or not). Both genders engage in displays.

Page 6: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

Methods:Gobies caught off west coast of Sweden, maintained in captivity.

Experiment 1• Three-part tank, divided by transparent partitions.• Male in the middle.• Dull female on one side, colorful female on the other.• Authors measured the amount of time spent close to

each female, and the # of displays directed at each.Experiment 2• Same set-up as above.• This time, females were artificially colored with a

permanent marker (“Apricot” for colorful females; “Colorless” marker used as a control) .

• Same methods as above.

Page 7: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

Results

1. Figure 1: a summary of the physical traits of the females used in experiments 1 and 2.

2. Figure 2: the results of the two choice experiments (“natural” and “colored” females).

Page 8: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

Results, SummaryMale spent more time with, and directed more displays at, colorful females. This was true whether the coloration was natural or artificial.

DiscussionStrong evidence in favor of the “male choice” hypothesis for female ornamentation.

Page 9: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

Discussion, continuedWhy do males prefer orange females?Hypothesis: the color is an “honest signal” of female fitness.

More studies needed to see whether these same choice patterns operate in natural habitats, and how being “choosy” benefits the male.

Page 10: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

Discussion, continuedCritique and concerns:• The artificial coloring.• The slight “roundness” difference in

experiment 1.• Can we generalize much from this species?

Page 11: Male mate choice selects for female coloration in a fish Article by Amundsen and Forsgren (2001) Summarized by Dr. Gier.

QUESTIONS?