Titel (eng)

Mate choice is affected by parasite infestation rate of the choosing individual as well as of potential mating partners

Autor*in

Alejandro Cantarero   Complutense University of Madrid

Olga V. Dolnik   University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

Matteo Griggio   Università di Padova

Herbert Hoi   University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Beschreibung (eng)

Parasites are known to be a key driving force in mate choice and are important for the expression and evolution of ornaments and behavioral traits being used. However, there is little experimental evidence on how the parasite's burden of the choosing individual is integrated into the mate-choice process and how it affects decision-making, especially in relation to parasite infestation of potential mates. Thus, the aim of our study was to determine whether female house sparrows Passer domesticus adjust their mate preference according to their own as well as the parasite load of prospective partners. To do this, we experimentally manipulated female parasite load and determined their mate preferences prior to and after parasite treatment. We manipulated the chronic coccidian parasite burden of females either by initiating the acute infection phase via re-infecting them with coccidian or by temporally reducing the parasite load of coccidia. We then measured the effect of this manipulation on mate preference by presenting females with a choice of four stimuli: three males with similar ornaments, but unmanipulated, naturally varying chronic coccidiosis levels, and an unmanipulated control female. Additionally, we recorded some males' behavior in relation to their infection status pointing toward an increased or reduced interest in mating. We found that females preferred highly infested males prior to manipulation, regardless of their own infestation level. However, after manipulation, infested females avoided highly infested males probably in response to the deterioration of their health condition by parasites. Our study suggests that mate-choice decisions are more complex when they are mediated by parasites. The implications of parasites for evolutionary theories of sexual signaling and mate choice are discussed.

Sprache des Objekts

Englisch

Datum

2022

Rechte

Creative Commons Lizenzvertrag
Dieses Werk bzw. dieser Inhalt steht unter einer
CC BY-NC 4.0 - Creative Commons Namensnennung - Nicht-kommerziell 4.0 International Lizenz.

CC BY-NC 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

Klassifikation

Passer-Domesticus; Coccidian Infection; Song Complexity; Immune Defense; Female Choice; Badge Size; Evolution; Isospora; Sparrows; Males

Mitglied in der/den Collection(s) (1)

o:605 Publikationen / Veterinärmedizinische Universität Wien