Journal article

No male agonistic experience effect on pre-copulatory mate choice in female earwigs

E van Lieshout, E van Wilgenburg, MA Elgar

Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | SPRINGER | Published : 2009

Abstract

Mating with dominant males may confer considerable benefits, but also incur significant costs, hence intrasexual competitiveness is a likely target of mate choice. In addition to established modes of mate assessment, females may use cues or signals associated with agonistic experience effects to assess the relative competiveness of males. Experience effects, where the outcome of a fight increases the likelihood of a similar outcome in subsequent fights, may result from an animal's altered state after conflict, but can also arise from strategic rival use of information perceived about this altered state. While females may similarly use this information in mate choice decisions, this potential..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

We thank the Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment for research funding. E. v. L. would like to thank the Australian government for providing an International Postgraduate Research Scholarship and the University of Melbourne for providing a Melbourne International Research Scholarship.