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Cave molly females (Poecilia mexicana) avoid parasitised males
Authors:Martin?Plath  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:mplath@zimserver.zoologie.uni-hamburg.de"   title="  mplath@zimserver.zoologie.uni-hamburg.de"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author
Affiliation:(1) Biozentrum Grindel, Abteilung für Verhaltensbiologie, Universität Hamburg, Martin Luther King Platz 3, 20146 Hamburg, Germany
Abstract:Cave mollies (Poecilia mexicana) inhabit a dark Mexican cave, where visual communication is impossible. I observed the preference of cave molly females to associate with a non-infected male or a male infected with a pathogenic bacterium (Mycobacterium sp.) which causes the formation of large blisters around the eyes of infected fish. Females preferred to stay near the non-infected male only when the two stimulus males were separated from the female by transparent Plexiglas in light, but not when the males were separated by a wire-mesh in light (where vision was to some extent hindered, but the females perceived non-visual cues) or in darkness (where only non-visual cues were available). I conclude that the visually mediated preference for non-infected males has been maintained during the colonisation of the lightless habitat, but a preference for this trait on the basis of non-visual cues did not evolve. The cave habitat may be poor in pathogens, resulting in low selection pressure to evolve a non-visual preference for males without bacterial infection.Communicated by R.F. Oliveira
Keywords:Cave fish  Female choice  Mycobacterium  Parasite avoidance  Sexual selection
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