Title of article
EAVESDROPPING AND MATE CHOICE IN FEMALE FIGHTING FISH
Author/Authors
Doutrelant، Claire نويسنده , , McGregor، Peter K. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages
-1654
From page
1655
To page
0
Abstract
Despite the fact that most communication occurs in the context of networks of several individuals, the consequences of considering communication as a network on individualsʹ capacity for gathering information on congeners has been little investigated. Eavesdropping is the behaviour of a receiver extracting information from an interaction in which it is taking no part. Due to the fact that signals used in aggressive interactions are assumed to be reliable, eavesdropping could be an effective way of evaluating the quality of potential mates. We conducted two experiments designed to discover if female fighting fish (Betta splendens) monitor aggressive interactions between two males and if information gained by eavesdropping is used in the initial stages of subsequent mate choice. We found that females that had seen the interaction visited the winner first more often and spent significantly more time near, looking at and displaying to the winner of the interaction. By contrast females that had not seen the interaction visited the loser first more often and did not behave significantly differently to winner and loser. Overall these results are consistent with the idea that in the initial stages of mate choice females eavesdrop, i.e. use information gathered from male-male displays.
Journal title
BEHAVIOUR (LEIDEN)
Serial Year
2000
Journal title
BEHAVIOUR (LEIDEN)
Record number
21174
Link To Document