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Sequential search and the influence of male quality on female mating decisions
Authors:Daniel D. Wiegmann  Kajal Mukhopadhyay  Leslie A. Real
Affiliation:(1) Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA, IN;(2) Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403, USA. e-mail: ddwiegm@bgnet.bgsu.edu, US;(3) Department of Economics, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA, IN;(4) Present address: Department of Economics, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA, US;(5) Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA., IN;(6) Present address: Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA, US
Abstract: The patterns of phenotypic association between mated males and females depend on the decision rules that individuals employ during search for a mate. We generalize the sequential search rule and examine how the shape of the function that relates a male character to the benefit of a mating decision influences the threshold value of the male trait that induces females to terminate search. If the fitness function is linear the optimal threshold value of a male character increases with the slope of the function. The phenotypic threshold criterion declines, all else being equal, if the fitness function is made more concave (or less convex) by an increase of the risk of the function. The expression of the trait in females has no effect on the optimal threshold value of a male character if the fitness function is linear and phenotypic values combine additively to influence the benefit of a mating decision; the phenotypic threshold criterion is ubiquitous among females. A convex fitness function induces females with high trait values to adopt a relatively high phenotypic threshold criterion, whereas a concave fitness function induces such females to adopt a low threshold value for the male trait. Thus, linear, convex and concave fitness functions effect random, assortative and disassortative combinations of phenotypes among mated individuals, respectively. Changes of female search behavior induced by changes of the distribution of a male character similarly depend on the shape of the fitness function. A variance-preserving increase of male trait values produces a relatively small increase of the threshold criterion for the male character if the fitness function is concave, relative to conditions in which the fitness function is either linear or convex. Our results suggest that a sequential search rule can in principle induce the kinds of mating patterns observed in nature and that the phenotypic association between mated individuals is likely to depend on how a male character translates into fitness, the distribution of the trait among males and attributes of searching females. Received: 20 September 1997 / Revised version: 13 August 1998
Keywords:: Mate choice  Mate quality  Risk  Sequential search  Sexual selection
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