Journal article
Diet-mediated pheromones and signature mixtures can enforce signal reliability
J Henneken, JQD Goodger, TM Jones, MA Elgar
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution | FRONTIERS MEDIA SA | Published : 2017
Open access
Abstract
Diet is arguably the most significant environmental factor shaping chemical signals in animals. In rare cases, dietary components are converted directly into pheromones or signature mixtures but more generally variation in an individual's diet influences their overall condition and thus capacity to synthesize the signal. Typically, diet is variable between individuals of the same species and this can lead to variation in signals. This variation presents specific challenges to receivers, who must be able to recognize and respond to a greater range of signals. However, such variation might also provide the receiver with key information about the signaller, allowing them to respond to the signa..
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Funding Acknowledgements
The Australian Research Council (DP0987360 and DP120100162 to ME), Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment managed by ANZ trustees, Jasper Loftus-Hill Memorial Fund, and Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship (to JH) support our research.