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Title

Female tawny-bellied seedeaters do not prefer more colorful males in choice experiments.

Authors

Facchinetti, Carolina; Reboreda, Juan

Abstract

Plumage coloration has long been studied as a sexually selected character. The tawny-bellied seedeater, Sporophila hypoxantha, is a sexually dichromatic species, with adult males the more colorful sex and juvenile males indistinguishable from females. We did choice experiments to evaluate female preferences for males that differ in age or plumage coloration. Females were evaluated in three experiments: (1) choice between males with similar breast brightness that differed in age, (2) choice between males of 2 years of age that differed in breast brightness, and (3) choice between males of 3 or more years of age that differed in breast brightness. We also repeated the latter experiment with estradiol-treated females. We did not find a clear female preference for brighter or older males, as females spent the same proportion of time with males of similar breast brightness that differed in age or with males of similar age that differed in breast brightness. Our results do not support the hypothesis that breast brightness is a cue used by female tawny-bellied seedeaters at the time of choosing males. We propose that, in this species, male plumage coloration might play a role in intrasexual competition.

Subjects

GRANIVORES; COLOR of birds; SEXUAL behavior in birds; ESTRADIOL; HYPOTHESIS; ANIMAL social behavior; BEHAVIOR; BIRDS

Publication

Journal of Ethology, 2013, Vol 31, Issue 3, p233

ISSN

0289-0771

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1007/s10164-013-0371-3

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