Female budgerigars prefer males with foraging skills that differ from their own

IF 1.9 2区 生物学 Q3 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Yuqi Zou, Zitan Song, Jiani Chen, Yuehua Sun, Michael Griesser
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Foraging skills influence food intake and could therefore also play a role in mate choice decision. Previous empirical work has shown that individuals benefit from being in groups that include individuals with a variety of foraging skills as this increases foraging success. This idea, formalized in the skill-pool hypothesis, may extend to mate choice. Diverse foraging skills can expand the foraging niche of a pair and benefit offspring through enhanced parental provisioning, and exposure to a broader foraging skillset. To test this idea, we trained captive female and male budgerigars to solve one of two different novel foraging puzzle boxes. Then, females simultaneously observed two males that could solve either the same or the other box, and assessed female preferences in a binary mate choice apparatus. Females preferred males with foraging skills that differed from their own, independent of the skill type and the number of times males solved the foraging puzzle. These findings show that foraging skills can influence social preferences, including in a mate choice context, and support intraspecific diversity in foraging skills.

雌性虎皮鹦鹉更喜欢觅食技巧与自己不同的雄性虎皮鹦鹉
觅食技能影响食物摄入量,因此也可能在择偶决策中发挥作用。先前的实证研究表明,个体从拥有各种觅食技能的群体中受益,因为这增加了觅食成功率。这一观点在“技能池假说”中得以形式化,可以扩展到配偶选择。多样化的觅食技能可以扩大一对的觅食生态位,并通过提高亲本供给和接触更广泛的觅食技能,使后代受益。为了验证这个想法,我们训练了圈养的雌虎皮鹦鹉和雄虎皮鹦鹉,让它们解决两个不同的觅食谜题盒子中的一个。然后,雌性同时观察两个可以解决相同或另一个盒子的雄性,并在二元配偶选择装置中评估雌性的偏好。雌性偏爱觅食技能与自己不同的雄性,与雄性解决觅食难题的技能类型和次数无关。这些发现表明,觅食技能可以影响社会偏好,包括在配偶选择的背景下,并支持觅食技能的种内多样性。
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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来源期刊
Animal Cognition
Animal Cognition 生物-动物学
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
18.50%
发文量
125
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Animal Cognition is an interdisciplinary journal offering current research from many disciplines (ethology, behavioral ecology, animal behavior and learning, cognitive sciences, comparative psychology and evolutionary psychology) on all aspects of animal (and human) cognition in an evolutionary framework. Animal Cognition publishes original empirical and theoretical work, reviews, methods papers, short communications and correspondence on the mechanisms and evolution of biologically rooted cognitive-intellectual structures. The journal explores animal time perception and use; causality detection; innate reaction patterns and innate bases of learning; numerical competence and frequency expectancies; symbol use; communication; problem solving, animal thinking and use of tools, and the modularity of the mind.
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