4.5 Article

Female mate choice in convict cichlids is transitive and consistent with a self-referent directional preference

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ZOOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1742-9994-10-69

Keywords

Mate choice; Rationality; Transitivity; Assortative mating; Self-referent directional preference; Amatitlania nigrofasciata

Categories

Funding

  1. BQR research grant, University of Burgundy
  2. HCPER grant, Burgundy Regional Council

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Introduction: One of the most important decisions that an animal has to make in its life is choosing a mate. Although most studies in sexual selection assume that mate choice is rational, this assumption has not been tested seriously. A crucial component of rationality is that animals exhibit transitive choices: if an individual prefers option A over B, and B over C, then it also prefers A over C. Results: We assessed transitivity in mate choice: 40 female convict cichlids had to make a series of binary choices between males of varying size. Ninety percent of females showed transitive choices. The mean preference index was significantly higher when a female chose between their most preferred and least preferred male (male 1 vs. male 3) compared to when they chose between males of adjacent ranks (1 vs. 2 or 2 vs. 3). The results are consistent with a simple underlying preference function leading to transitive choice: females preferred males about one third larger than themselves. This rule of thumb correctly predicted which male was preferred in 67% of the cases and the ordering in binary choices in 78% of cases. Conclusions: This study provides the first evidence for strong stochastic transitivity in a context of mate choice. The females exhibited ordinal preferences and the direction and magnitude of these preferences could be predicted from a simple rule. The females do not necessarily compare two males to choose the best; it is sufficient to use a self-referent evaluation. Such a simple decision rule has important implications for the evolution of the mating strategies and it is consistent with patterns of assortative mating repeatedly observed at population level.

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