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Parasites and Sexual Selection in Birds of Paradise
Authors:PRUETT-JONES  S G; PRUETT-JONES  M A; JONES  H I
Institution:Department of Biology C-016, University of California at San Diego La folia, California 92093
Natural Reserve System, Scripps Institution of Oceanography A-001, University of California at San Diego La Jolla, California 92093
Department of Zoology, University of Western Australia, Nedlands Western Australia 6009, Australia
Abstract:We studied blood parasite infections in relation to aspectsof sexual selection and mate choice in 10 species of birds ofparadise. Across species there was a significant, positive correlationbetween relative parasite intensity and showiness in males.Parasite infections also correlated across species with thedegree of sexual dimorphism and varied with mating systems.Promiscuous species were showier and had significantly higherparasite prevalences than monogamous species. Within one species,Lawes' Parotia (Parotia lawesii), parasite intensity was negativelycorrelated with all phenotypic traits examined, a pattern significantlydifferent than random. The mating success of males with lowparasite intensities varied, but males with high intensitiesdid not mate. Sampling of individual males on repeated occasionsrevealed large temporal differences in parasite counts whichspanned the range believed to affect behavior and mating success.Whereas the interspecific correlations support one predictionof the Hamilton and Zuk hypothesis on parasites and sexual selection,the intraspecific data are equivocal with respect to a secondprediction of this hypothesis. Parasites appear to influencethe behavior of Lawes' Parotia, but alternative explanationsto that of Hamilton and Zuk for this effect are equally plausibleand there is no evidence of a link between female choice andthe traits in males indicative of parasite loads. We suggestthat female Lawes' Parotia may be avoiding highly infected malesrather than actively choosing parasite-resistant males.
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