To lek or not to lek: mating strategies of male fallow deer |
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Authors: | Apollonio, Marco Festa-Bianchet, Marco Mari, Franco Mattioli, Stefano Sarno, Benedetta |
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Affiliation: | Istituto Nazionale di Biologia della Selvaggina "A. Ghigi," Via Ca' Fornacetta 9, 40064 Ozzano Emilia (BO), Italy Large Animal Research Group, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK Via Lanino 8, 20144 Milano, Italy Dipartimento di Biologia e Fisiologia Generali, Sezione Zoologia, Viale delle Scienze 43100 Parma, Italy Dipartimento di Scienze del Comportamento Animale e dell'Uomo Via Volta 6, 56126 Pisa, Italy Centro di Faunistica Tropicale CNR, Via Romana 17,50125 Firenze, Italy |
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Abstract: | We studied the mating system of fallow deer (Dama dama) for6 years in central Italy. Males in this population could defendterritories that were either single, clumped in leks, or satelliteto leks. The most highly successful males in our study werein leks. When we considered all males, there were no significantdifferences in average copulatory success according to territorytype because many lek males did not achieve any copulations,which were seen in only a few lek territories. The variancein copulatory success, however, was much greater for leks thanelsewhere. Single territories were occupied for shorter timesduring the rut than lek territories. Fighting among males wasmore frequent in the lek, even when we excluded highly successfullek males from the analysis. Chases of nonterritorial malesand harem size were correlated with the number of copulationsachieved by individual males, but did not vary according toterritory type. Copulatory success of some individuals increasedwith age, but there were no age differences among males holdingdifferent types of territories. Satellite males switched tolek territoriality in the course of one rut, but switches fromsingle territory to lek territory were rare. We suggest thatmales in single territories are inferior competitors that selecta low-risk, lowbenefit strategy, whereas those in lek territorieswhere no copulations were seen may be attempting to establishthemselves on the lek to increase their copulatory success infuture years. |
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