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SEXUAL SELECTION,MULTIPLE MALE ORNAMENTS,AND AGE‐ AND CONDITION‐DEPENDENT SIGNALING IN THE COMMON YELLOWTHROAT
Authors:Corey R. Freeman‐Gallant  Conor C. Taff  Douglas F. Morin  Peter O. Dunn  Linda A. Whittingham  Susan M. Tsang
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, New York 12866;2. E‐mail: cfreeman@skidmore.edu;3. Current address: Animal Behavior Graduate Group and Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California—Davis, Davis, California, 95616.;4. Current address: Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York, 14850.;5. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201;6. Current address: Department of Biology, City University of New York, New York, 10016.
Abstract:In many animals, sexual selection has resulted in complex signaling systems in which males advertise aspects of their phenotypic or genetic quality through elaborate ornamentation and display behaviors. Different ornaments might convey different information or be directed at different receivers, but they might also be redundant signals of quality that function reliably at different times (ages) or in different contexts. We explored sexual selection and age‐ and condition‐dependent signaling in the common yellowthroat (Geothlypis trichas), a sexually dichromatic warbler with two prominent plumage ornaments—a melanin‐based, black facial “mask” and carotenoid‐based, UV‐yellow “bib.” In a three‐year study, variance among males in the number of social (Mw) and extra‐pair (Me) mates generated strong sexual selection on mask and bib attributes. Some traits (mask size, bib yellow brightness) were correlated with male age and did not experience selection beyond age‐related increases in Mw and Me. Other traits showed age‐specific (bib size) or age‐reversed (ultraviolet brightness) patterns of selection that paralleled changes in the information‐content of each ornament. The components of male fitness generating selection in young versus old males were distinct, reflecting different sources of variation in male fertilization success. Age‐ and context‐dependent changes in the strength, direction, and target of selection may help explain the maintenance of multiple ornaments in this and other species.
Keywords:Condition‐dependence  epigamic signaling  honesty  ornament size
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