4.5 Article

Physiological costs and age constraints of a sexual ornament: an experimental study in a wild bird

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BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY
卷 32, 期 2, 页码 327-338

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/araa143

关键词

condition dependence; differential cost; honest signal; immunocompetence; index signal; life history trade-off

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Research suggests that the production of early-blue plumage in male superb fairy-wrens may come with physiological costs, such as lower body condition, decreased fat reserves, and increased likelihood of parasitization by lice. However, there were no negative effects on immune function, blood parasites, exposure to stressors, or survival. Juvenile males did not exhibit significantly higher costs when induced to molt early compared to adult males, but there was a clear difference in molt timing between juveniles and adults, indicating age as a constraint on ornament exaggeration.
Sexual ornaments are often considered honest signals of quality because potential costs or constraints prevent their display by low-quality individuals. Testing for potential physiological costs of ornaments is difficult, as this requires experimentally forcing individuals to produce and display elaborate ornaments. We use this approach to test whether a sexually selected trait is physiologically costly to male superb fairy-wrens (Malurus cyaneus). Male fairy-wrens molt from brown to blue breeding plumage at different times of the year, and females strongly prefer the few males that are blue early, during winter. We used short-acting testosterone implants to stimulate males to produce early-blue plumage and assessed costs during and after molt using a panel of physiological indices. Testosterone-implanted, T-males molted in winter and produced blue plumage 6 weeks before control-implanted, C-males. T-males molted while in lower body condition, tended to have lower fat reserves, and were more likely to be parasitized by lice. However, we detected no negative effects on immune function, blood parasites, exposure to stressors, or survival. Juvenile males never naturally display early-blue plumage, but we found no evidence for increased costs paid by juvenile T-males. Instead, juvenile T-males molted later than adult T-males, suggesting that age presents an absolute constraint on ornament exaggeration that cannot be fully overcome by testosterone treatment. Together, these small costs and large, age-related constraints may enforce signal honesty, and explain female preference for early-blue males.

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