Authors
Jean-Guy Godin, Lee Alan Dugatkin
Publication date
1996/9/17
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
93
Issue
19
Pages
10262-10267
Description
Although females prefer to mate with brightly colored males in numerous species, the benefits accruing to such females are virtually unknown. According to one hypothesis of sexual selection theory, if the expression of costly preferred traits in males (such as conspicuous colors) is proportional to the male's overall quality or reveals his quality, a well-developed trait should indicate good condition and/or viability for example. A female choosing such a male would therefore stand to gain direct or indirect fitness benefits, or both. Among potential phenotypic indicators of an individual's quality are the amount and brightness of its carotenoid-based colors and its boldness, as measured by its willingness to risk approaching predators without being killed. Here, we show experimentally that in the Trinidadian guppy (Poecilia reticulata) the visual conspicuousness of the color pattern of males correlates positively with boldness …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JG Godin, LA Dugatkin - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996