Territoriality and Non-Random Mating in Sage Grouse, Centrocercus urophasianus

R.Haven Wiley
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Nevertheless, interactions among territorial individuals can incorporate two kinds of polarity: territorial dominance, as each individual dominates his neighbours inside his own territory but is subordinate to them in their territories; and polarized territoriality, when territorial individuals established in preferred areas prevent other territorial individuals from occupying these areas. The indications of reciprocity and polarity in the interactions of male sage grouse are investigated in this paper to clarify the expression of territoriality and dominance hierarchy in their social organization.</p><p><em>Sections III to VI</em>. Sage grouse gather for mating at communal display grounds, or leks, at traditional sites on sagebrush prairie. Although females arrive for mating primarily during 2 or 3 weeks in late March and April, males usually attend the leks regularly from February or March into May. Every morning and evening and often all night the males occupy small territories (13 to 100 m<sup>2</sup>) defined by boundary zones in which neighbours meet for facing-past encounters and wing-fighting (behaviour patterns are described in Section IV). Within their territories males repeatedly perform an elaborate, stereotyped display, the strut.</p><p>I studied three leks with different numbers of attending males (154, 30 and 260), one lek each spring from 1967 to 1969. Time-lapse cinematography was used to record the males' positions and activities.</p><p>Females congregate in dense packs at certain sites on a lek, usually in the same places on successive mornings. These sites, termed mating centres, also usually remain in the same locations in successive years.</p><p><em>Section VII</em>. Almost all copulations occurred at these mating centres, within the territories of one or two males, although as many as eighty other males occupied territories around each mating centre. Consequently, each year fewer than 10 per cent of the males completed more than 75 per cent of all copulations. Neighbours occasionally interrupt each other's copulations, but usually only those attempted near or within the boundary zone of facing-past encounters. Therefore, a male's success in mating does not depend on direct prevention of copulations by other males. Instead, a male becomes successful in mating by acquiring a territory at a mating centre.</p><p><em>Section VIII</em>. The behaviour of females arriving at a lek suggests how they might locate the mating centre. The possible cues associated with a mating centre are evaluated for their specificity in identifying the position of the mating centre and for their availability to the females. Although the behaviour of males near a mating centre differed in several respects from that of more peripheral males (for instance, the former strutted more persistently and engaged in much briefer and perhaps slightly more frequent facing-past encounters), these differences apparently depended mostly on the males' proximities to females, rather than on intrinsic differences among the individual males. Most males 2 or more years old, whether near a mating centre or not, responded similarly to the presence of females within their territories.</p><p>Since a mating centre ordinarily has a traditional location within a lek, females might learn its position. Only limited guidance could come from the generally smaller territories of males near a mating centre.</p><p><em>Section IX</em>. Reciprocal interactions among males included the limited scope of neighbours' intrusions into each other's territories and neighbours' encounters as equals in boundary zones between their territories. Non-reciprocal, or polarized, relationships resulted from the attraction of males toward a mating centre. Since their more peripheral neighbours tended to encroach beyond their boundary zones, towards the females gathered at a mating centre, the more central males usually initiated most of the encounters with their more peripheral neighbours. The more central males also terminated most of their facing-past encounters, probably as a result of their tendencies to resume strutting nearer the females at the mating centre. When a territorial male disappeared, the vacancy was allocated to a more peripheral neighbour, one farther from the mating centre than the original occupant, without a noticeably increased frequency or intensity of antagonism.</p><p>First-year males lag behind older males in the growth of their gonads (Eng 1963). Some yearlings eventually established territories around the edge of a lek about half-way through the mating period, but yearling males were never seen copulating.</p><p><em>Section X</em>. The combination of three processes can explain how a male acquires a territory at a mating centre: (a) the establishment of yearling males on territories around the periphery of a lek; (b) the centripetal movement of territorial males toward the mating centre as vacancies arise; and (c) the tendency for individual males to occupy positions in subsequent years at least as close to the mating centre as previously. The present study has provided evidence for the first two processes. <span>Dalke et al. (1963)</span> obtained some evidence that males usually return to the same lek and often to the same position in successive years. The hypothesis implies that a male's chances for success in mating would increase with increasing age.</p><p><em>Section XI</em>. 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The lek behaviour of sage grouse represents the extreme development of this behaviour among grouse.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":100085,"journal":{"name":"Animal Behaviour Monographs","volume":"6 ","pages":"Pages 85-99, IN1-IN3, 100-169"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1973-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1016/0003-3472(73)90004-3","citationCount":"200","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Animal Behaviour Monographs","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0003347273900043","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 200

Abstract

Section I. Previous work has indicated that sage grouse Centrocercus wophasianus practice extreme polygyny (Simon 1940; Scott 1942; Patterson 1952; Lumsden 1968). The behavioural interactions that regulate this mating system have remained unclear, as the males' behaviour suggests both territoriality and dominance hierarchy.

Section II. A basic difference between territorial and hierarchical social systems involves the extent to which the constituent individuals' relationships are polarized, rather than reciprocal. In a dominance hierarchy the interactions between individuals are polarized; territorial individuals typically interact reciprocally. Nevertheless, interactions among territorial individuals can incorporate two kinds of polarity: territorial dominance, as each individual dominates his neighbours inside his own territory but is subordinate to them in their territories; and polarized territoriality, when territorial individuals established in preferred areas prevent other territorial individuals from occupying these areas. The indications of reciprocity and polarity in the interactions of male sage grouse are investigated in this paper to clarify the expression of territoriality and dominance hierarchy in their social organization.

Sections III to VI. Sage grouse gather for mating at communal display grounds, or leks, at traditional sites on sagebrush prairie. Although females arrive for mating primarily during 2 or 3 weeks in late March and April, males usually attend the leks regularly from February or March into May. Every morning and evening and often all night the males occupy small territories (13 to 100 m2) defined by boundary zones in which neighbours meet for facing-past encounters and wing-fighting (behaviour patterns are described in Section IV). Within their territories males repeatedly perform an elaborate, stereotyped display, the strut.

I studied three leks with different numbers of attending males (154, 30 and 260), one lek each spring from 1967 to 1969. Time-lapse cinematography was used to record the males' positions and activities.

Females congregate in dense packs at certain sites on a lek, usually in the same places on successive mornings. These sites, termed mating centres, also usually remain in the same locations in successive years.

Section VII. Almost all copulations occurred at these mating centres, within the territories of one or two males, although as many as eighty other males occupied territories around each mating centre. Consequently, each year fewer than 10 per cent of the males completed more than 75 per cent of all copulations. Neighbours occasionally interrupt each other's copulations, but usually only those attempted near or within the boundary zone of facing-past encounters. Therefore, a male's success in mating does not depend on direct prevention of copulations by other males. Instead, a male becomes successful in mating by acquiring a territory at a mating centre.

Section VIII. The behaviour of females arriving at a lek suggests how they might locate the mating centre. The possible cues associated with a mating centre are evaluated for their specificity in identifying the position of the mating centre and for their availability to the females. Although the behaviour of males near a mating centre differed in several respects from that of more peripheral males (for instance, the former strutted more persistently and engaged in much briefer and perhaps slightly more frequent facing-past encounters), these differences apparently depended mostly on the males' proximities to females, rather than on intrinsic differences among the individual males. Most males 2 or more years old, whether near a mating centre or not, responded similarly to the presence of females within their territories.

Since a mating centre ordinarily has a traditional location within a lek, females might learn its position. Only limited guidance could come from the generally smaller territories of males near a mating centre.

Section IX. Reciprocal interactions among males included the limited scope of neighbours' intrusions into each other's territories and neighbours' encounters as equals in boundary zones between their territories. Non-reciprocal, or polarized, relationships resulted from the attraction of males toward a mating centre. Since their more peripheral neighbours tended to encroach beyond their boundary zones, towards the females gathered at a mating centre, the more central males usually initiated most of the encounters with their more peripheral neighbours. The more central males also terminated most of their facing-past encounters, probably as a result of their tendencies to resume strutting nearer the females at the mating centre. When a territorial male disappeared, the vacancy was allocated to a more peripheral neighbour, one farther from the mating centre than the original occupant, without a noticeably increased frequency or intensity of antagonism.

First-year males lag behind older males in the growth of their gonads (Eng 1963). Some yearlings eventually established territories around the edge of a lek about half-way through the mating period, but yearling males were never seen copulating.

Section X. The combination of three processes can explain how a male acquires a territory at a mating centre: (a) the establishment of yearling males on territories around the periphery of a lek; (b) the centripetal movement of territorial males toward the mating centre as vacancies arise; and (c) the tendency for individual males to occupy positions in subsequent years at least as close to the mating centre as previously. The present study has provided evidence for the first two processes. Dalke et al. (1963) obtained some evidence that males usually return to the same lek and often to the same position in successive years. The hypothesis implies that a male's chances for success in mating would increase with increasing age.

Section XI. To clarify the behavioural manifestations of territoriality in sage grouse, a distinction is made between the territorial resident's aggression gradient and his isolation gradient. Male sage grouse occupy largely exclusive territories. Their ability to dominate agonistic encounters declines steeply across a narrow boundary zone. However, these isolation and aggression gradients are not congruent. The shapes of both gradients depend on the interactions of the resident and his neighbours.

Increased external pressure, owing to the attraction of males toward a mating centre, in conjunction with reduced internal resistance, owing to the central males' briefer facing-past encounters, could explain the generally smaller sizes of territories near a mating centre.

The males' interactions, which include both reciprocal and polarized components, suggest polarized territoriality, a form of social organization that merges features from the classical paradigms of both territoriality and dominance hierarchies. Polarized territoriality generates the radially differentiated social structure on a lek.

Section XII. A review of lek behaviour among grouse reveals only quantitative differences among the five species for which information on social organization is available. The lek behaviour of sage grouse represents the extreme development of this behaviour among grouse.

尾尾松鸡的地盘性和非随机交配
第一节前人的研究表明,艾草松鸡(Centrocercus wophasianus)实行极端的一夫多妻制(Simon 1940;斯科特1942;帕特森1952;拉姆斯登1968)。调节这种交配系统的行为互动仍然不清楚,因为雄性的行为表明了领土和统治等级。第二部分。领土社会制度和等级社会制度之间的一个基本区别涉及到组成个体关系的两极化程度,而不是相互关系。在统治等级中,个体之间的相互作用是极化的;有领地意识的个体通常会相互作用。然而,领土个体之间的相互作用可以包含两种极性:领土支配,因为每个个体在自己的领土内统治他的邻居,但在他们的领土上服从他们;两极化的领土,当领地个体在偏好的区域建立时阻止其他领地个体占领这些区域。本文研究了雄性艾草松鸡相互作用中互惠性和极性的表现,以阐明其社会组织中地盘性和优势等级的表达。第三节至第六节:艾草松鸡聚集在艾草草原的传统地点的公共展示场地或韭葱上交配。虽然雌性主要在3月下旬和4月的2或3周内到达交配,但雄性通常在2月或3月至5月定期参加交配。每天早上和晚上,通常是整个晚上,雄性都占据着由边界区域界定的小领土(13到100平方米),在这些边界区域内,邻居们会相遇,进行面对面的遭遇和翅膀的战斗(行为模式在第四节中描述)。在它们的领土内,雄性会反复进行精心制作的、刻板的展示,即趾高脚高。我研究了三个不同数量的男性参加的韭葱(154,30和260),从1967年到1969年每年春天一个韭葱。用延时摄影技术记录雄性的位置和活动。雌象密集地聚集在一条小路上的特定地点,通常在连续的早晨都聚集在同一个地方。这些地点被称为交配中心,通常在连续几年保持在相同的位置。第七节。几乎所有的交配都发生在这些交配中心,在一个或两个雄性的领地内,尽管在每个交配中心周围有多达80个其他雄性占据领地。因此,每年只有不到10%的雄性完成了75%以上的交配。邻居们偶尔会打断彼此的交配,但通常只是那些试图靠近或在过去相遇的边界区域内的人。因此,雄性交配的成功并不取决于其他雄性对交配的直接阻止。相反,雄性通过在交配中心获得领地来成功交配。第八部分。雌性到达洞穴的行为暗示了它们如何定位交配中心。对与交配中心相关的可能线索进行评估,以确定交配中心位置的特异性以及它们对雌性的可用性。尽管靠近交配中心的雄性的行为在几个方面与更外围的雄性不同(例如,前者更持久地昂首阔步,更短暂地参与,也许更频繁地面对过去的遭遇),这些差异显然主要取决于雄性与雌性的距离,而不是雄性个体之间的内在差异。大多数2岁或2岁以上的雄性,无论是否靠近交配中心,对其领地内出现的雌性做出相似的反应。由于交配中心通常在洞穴中有一个传统的位置,雌性可能会知道它的位置。只有有限的指导可能来自交配中心附近较小的雄性领地。第九节。雄性之间的相互作用包括邻居侵入对方领土的有限范围,以及邻居在其领土之间的边界区域平等地相遇。非互惠或两极分化的关系是由雄性被一个交配中心吸引而产生的。由于它们更外围的邻居倾向于侵犯它们的边界区域之外,朝向聚集在交配中心的雌性,更中心的雄性通常会主动与更外围的邻居接触。处于中心位置的雄性也终止了大部分面对面的相遇,可能是因为它们倾向于在交配中心昂首阔步地靠近雌性。当一个领地雄性消失时,这个空位被分配给一个更外围的邻居,一个比原来的占有者离交配中心更远的邻居,没有明显增加对抗的频率或强度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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