Male bower birds (birds that look like crows and live in Australia and Papua New Guinea) make elaborate structures (called bowers) out of grass and twigs. Males decorate their bowers with objects they find, like feathers of other birds, pieces of glass, shells, and bits of plastic: items that have no direct benefit to females. Females find some bower decorations VERY sexy and will mate with a male based on his bower decorations.
A. Propose a hypotheses for why this behavior in males and females evolved.
In pipefish (fish related to seahorses) instead of the female carrying the growing offspring, the male holds them in a brood pouch in his body until they hatch out. Basically, male pipefish are pregnant and their bodies supply the growing embryos with some nutrients required for development.
Large females that mate with males create more costly broods for males. In other words, it takes more energy for males to sustain their pregnancy with these offspring, mostly because many embryos inherited large size from their mother. Generally, the offspring of large mothers survive better than the offspring of small mothers.
Males can’t sustain multiple pregnancies in a short period of time from large females without substantial risks to their own health and survival.
After mating with a small female, male pipefish can “increase the rates of offspring abortion in pregnancies…to retain resources for future reproductive opportunities” (Paczolt & Jones,
Nature
, 2010).
A. Is the phenomenon of male-induced abortions Intersexual Selection or Intrasexual selection?
B. How would you describe it using the Sexual Selection categories that we discussed in class? (
Hint
: it is possible that we didn’t discuss this phenomenon from the male’s point of view.)
C. Briefly describe why you think such a phenomenon would evolve: specifically, why would males abort a brood of offspring mothered by a small female?
In black goby fish, males build nesting sites (a “cave” made out of rocks and shells) in which the females lay their eggs. Males fertilize these eggs then care for them until hatching. Males attract females to their nesting sites by releasing pheromones (chemicals that influence the behavior of other goby fish) into the water. These pheromones also provoke aggression in other males.
In addition to “parental males”- those that create nesting sites and care for young, there are smaller males that do not make nesting sites but swim into the nests of other males (usually undetected) while a female is there laying eggs. These smaller males then release sperm in order to fertilize that female’s eggs.
Parental males have a large gland that produces lots of their “sexy” pheromone, while the smaller non-parental males have only a tiny pheromone gland.
In experiments, parental males exposed to the glandular extracts of other males (which would contain the pheromone) reacted with aggressive behaviors like tail-beating and biting toward the source of the ph.
Male bower birds (birds that look like crows and live in Austr.docx
1. Male bower birds (birds that look like crows and live in
Australia and Papua New Guinea) make elaborate structures
(called bowers) out of grass and twigs. Males decorate their
bowers with objects they find, like feathers of other birds,
pieces of glass, shells, and bits of plastic: items that have no
direct benefit to females. Females find some bower decorations
VERY sexy and will mate with a male based on his bower
decorations.
A. Propose a hypotheses for why this behavior in males and
females evolved.
In pipefish (fish related to seahorses) instead of the female
carrying the growing offspring, the male holds them in a brood
pouch in his body until they hatch out. Basically, male pipefish
are pregnant and their bodies supply the growing embryos with
some nutrients required for development.
Large females that mate with males create more costly broods
for males. In other words, it takes more energy for males to
sustain their pregnancy with these offspring, mostly because
many embryos inherited large size from their mother. Generally,
the offspring of large mothers survive better than the offspring
of small mothers.
Males can’t sustain multiple pregnancies in a short period of
time from large females without substantial risks to their own
health and survival.
After mating with a small female, male pipefish can “increase
2. the rates of offspring abortion in pregnancies…to retain
resources for future reproductive opportunities” (Paczolt &
Jones,
Nature
, 2010).
A. Is the phenomenon of male-induced abortions Intersexual
Selection or Intrasexual selection?
B. How would you describe it using the Sexual Selection
categories that we discussed in class? (
Hint
: it is possible that we didn’t discuss this phenomenon from the
male’s point of view.)
C. Briefly describe why you think such a phenomenon would
evolve: specifically, why would males abort a brood of
offspring mothered by a small female?
In black goby fish, males build nesting sites (a “cave” made out
of rocks and shells) in which the females lay their eggs. Males
fertilize these eggs then care for them until hatching. Males
attract females to their nesting sites by releasing pheromones
(chemicals that influence the behavior of other goby fish) into
the water. These pheromones also provoke aggression in other
males.
In addition to “parental males”- those that create nesting sites
and care for young, there are smaller males that do not make
nesting sites but swim into the nests of other males (usually
undetected) while a female is there laying eggs. These smaller
males then release sperm in order to fertilize that female’s eggs.
3. Parental males have a large gland that produces lots of their
“sexy” pheromone, while the smaller non-parental males have
only a tiny pheromone gland.
In experiments, parental males exposed to the glandular extracts
of other males (which would contain the pheromone) reacted
with aggressive behaviors like tail-beating and biting toward the
source of the pheromone. When parental males were exposed to
the glandular extracts of small, non-parental males, they had no
reaction (Locatello et al.,
Journal of Experimental Biology
, 2010).
A. Is the phenomenon of non-parental males in this mating
system an example of Intersexual Selection (between two
different sexes) or Intrasexual selection (within the same sex)?
B. How would you describe it using the Sexual Selection
categories that we discussed in class?
C. Briefly describe why you think such non-parental males
would evolve to have no sexual pheromones.