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Combs and sexual selection in black grouse (Tetrao tetrix)
Authors:Rintamaki, Pekka T.   Hoglund, Jacob   Karvonen, Eevi   Alatalo, Rauno V.   Bjorklund, Niklas   Lundberg, Arne   Ratti, Osmo   Vouti, Jyrki
Affiliation:a Department of Population Biology, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala University, Norbyvägen 18 D SE-75236 Uppsala, Sweden b Department of Animal Ecology, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala University, Norbyvägen 18 D SE-75236 Uppsala, Sweden c University of Jyväskylä, Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, PO Box 35, FIN-40351, Jyväskylä, Finland d Arctic Centre, University of Lapland, PO Box 122, FIN-96101 Rovaniemi, Finland
Abstract:We studied supra-orbital combs in lekking black grouse (Tetraotetrix) in relation to sexual selection at five leks in Finland1991-1998 and four leks in Sweden 1992-1995. Comb size wasestimated in two ways: by observing its natural size in thefield at different behaviors ("observed comb size"), and bymeasuring the comb size from captured birds ("measured combsize"). The size of combs is highly variable, and individualscan change it within seconds. Males express their larger combsduring display, as compared to other behaviors. Observed meancomb sizes were larger on leks with a higher number of malesand a higher number of copulations. Measured and observed combsizes and copulatory success did not significantly correlatewhen all males where analyzed, but a positive and significantrelationship between observed comb size and copulatory successwas found within males that achieved copulations. Measured comblength correlated positively with the amount of testosterone.While females were present on the lek, displaying and successfulmales showed the largest observed comb size. When we comparedobserved comb size during fighting between successful and unsuccessfulmales and correlated comb size of pairs of fighting males withtheir fighting activity, no significant differences in combsize were found. The result that comb size correlated significantlywith an increase in testosterone level and that larger combsize, within successful males, predicted higher copulatorysuccess suggests that combs may be a cue for females to assessmale quality. The lack of a significant relationship betweenobserved comb size and fighting behavior suggests that combsize either has minor importance in male-male signaling onthe lek or that males may express similar-sized combs duringfighting to avoid serious fights and thus risk of comb injuries.
Keywords:black grouse   combs   copulatory success   sexual selection   Tetrao tetrix.
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