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- Title
Males are attracted by their own courtship signals.
- Authors
Ribeiro, Pablo D.; Christy, John H.; Rissanen, Rebecca J.; Kim, Tae Won
- Abstract
Courting male fiddler crabs Uca terpsichores (1 cm carapace width) sometimes build mounds of sand called hoods at the entrances to their burrows. Males wave their single enlarged claws to attract females to their burrows for mating. It was shown previously that burrows with hoods are more attractive to females and that females visually orient to these structures. In this study, we test whether males also use their hoods to find their burrows. We first determined the maximum distance that males can see and find a burrow opening without a hood. Males were removed from their burrows and placed on the sand at a range of distances from a burrow opening. If they were more than about 8 cm (seven units of eye-height) away, they were unable find the burrow. In contrast, males that were burrow residents used a non-visual path map to return to their burrows from much greater distances. To determine if hoods help males find their burrows when there are errors in their path maps, we moved residents 1–49 cm on sliding platforms producing errors equal to the distances they were moved. Males with self-made hoods or hood models at their burrows relocated their burrows at significantly greater distances than did males with unadorned burrows. Hood builders also relocated their burrows faster. Hence, hoods have two functions: they attract females and they provide a visual cue that males use to find their burrows quickly and reliably when their path maps fail.
- Subjects
ANIMAL behavior; FIDDLER crabs; FAMILIAL behavior in animals; ANIMAL sexual behavior; FIDDLER crab behavior; ANIMAL courtship
- Publication
Behavioral Ecology & Sociobiology, 2006, Vol 61, Issue 1, p81
- ISSN
0340-5443
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00265-006-0238-5