High costs of female choice in a lekking Lizard.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: ArtículoIdioma: Inglés Tema(s): Clasificación CDD:
  • 21 597.9542
Recursos en línea: En: PLOS ONE Vol. 2, no. 6 (June 2007), p. 1-6Tema: Although the cost of mate choice is an essential component of the evolution and maintenance of sexual selection, the energetic cost of female choice has not previously been assessed directly. Here we report that females can incur high energetic costs as a result of discriminating among potential mates. We used heart rate biologging to quantify energetic expenditure in lek-mating female Galapagos marine iguanas (Amblyrhynchus cristatus). Receptive females spent 78.9623.2 kJ of energy on mate choice over a 30-day period, which is equivalent to , of one day’s energy budget. Females that spent more time on the territories of high-quality, high-activity males displayed greater energetic expenditure on mate choice, lost more mass, and showed a trend towards producing smaller follicles. Choosy females also appear to face a reduced probability of survival if El Niño conditions occur in the year following breeding. These findings indicate that female choice can carry significant costs, and suggest that the benefits that lek-mating females gain through mating with a preferred male may be higher than previously predicted.
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Although the cost of mate choice is an essential component of the evolution and maintenance of sexual selection, the energetic cost of female choice has not previously been assessed directly. Here we report that females can incur high energetic costs as a result of discriminating among potential mates. We used heart rate biologging to quantify energetic expenditure in lek-mating female Galapagos marine iguanas (Amblyrhynchus cristatus). Receptive females spent 78.9623.2 kJ of energy on mate choice over a 30-day period, which is equivalent to , of one day’s energy budget. Females that spent more time on the territories of high-quality, high-activity males displayed greater energetic expenditure on mate choice, lost more mass, and showed a trend towards producing smaller follicles. Choosy females also appear to face a reduced probability of survival if El Niño conditions occur in the year following breeding. These findings indicate that female choice can carry significant costs, and suggest that the benefits that lek-mating females gain through mating with a preferred male may be higher than previously predicted.

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