Diverging Cave- and River-Dwelling Newts Exert the Same Mate Preference in their Native Light Conditions

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_DBACE8436C67
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Diverging Cave- and River-Dwelling Newts Exert the Same Mate Preference in their Native Light Conditions
Journal
Ethology
Author(s)
Dreiss A.N., Guillaume O., Clobert J.
ISSN
0179-1613
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2009
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
115
Number
11
Pages
1036-1045
Language
english
Abstract
When colonizing a new habitat, populations must adapt their sexual behaviour to new ecological constraints. Because caves display drastically different conditions from surface habitats and cave animals are deprived from visual information, hypogean populations are expected to have modified their mate preference and signalling behaviour after cave colonization. Here, we experimentally examined the female preference and the sexual behaviour of brook newts Calotriton asper from different cave and river populations, either in light or in darkness. Our results suggest that females prefer large individuals in both hypogean and epigean populations, but that this preference is only expressed in the light conditions of their native habitat. Hence, some mate choice criteria would be maintained across genetically divergent populations and throughout dissimilar habitats. However, this sexual behaviour is likely to be expressed via a different sensory pathway in the different habitats, suggesting that a sensory shift has occurred in cave populations, enabling animals to communicate through a non-visual channel.
Keywords
Salamander Euproctus-Asper, Female Mating Preferences, Chemical Cues, Poecilia-Mexicana, Choice, Populations, Teleostei, Selection, Behavior, Divergence
Web of science
Create date
03/11/2009 16:58
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:00
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