Search results for "black grouse"

showing 10 items of 35 documents

Stabilising selection on immune response in male black grouse Lyrurus tetrix

2017

Illnesses caused by a variety of micro- and macro- organisms can negatively affect individuals’ fitness, leading to the expectation that immunity is under positive selection. However, immune responses are costly and individuals must trade-off their immune response with other fitness components (e.g. survival or reproductive success) meaning that individuals with intermediate response may have the greatest overall fitness. Such a process might be particularly acute in species with strong sexual selection because the condition-dependence of male secondary sexual-traits might lead to striking phenotypic differences amongst males of different immune response levels. We tested whether there is s…

Male0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineImmunocompetanceanimal diseasesZoologyecological immunologychemical and pharmacologic phenomenaEcological immunologylife history theoryBiologykoiraat010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesLife history theory03 medical and health sciencesImmune systemAntigenimmunologiaImmunityLife history theoryAnimalsHorsesGalliformesStabilising selectionstabilising selectionelämänhistoriaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)immunocompetanceC300 ZoologyluonnonvalintateeriReproductive successReproductionBehavioral Ecology–Original Researchbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationPhenotype030104 developmental biologyimmuunivasteSexual selectionImmunologybacteriaELISAOecologia
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Color Signals in the Black Grouse (Tetrao tetrix): Signal Properties and Their Condition Dependency

2009

Recent progress in techniques of quantifying between-individual differences of color-based ornaments has revealed undiscovered possibilities for research in sexual selection. We present how the color spectra data can be comprehensively used for studying the importance of sexual ornaments in the black grouse and how these ornaments are related to a male condition. For this, we used both correlative field and experimental data. Field data indicated that older males had more chromatic coloration than yearlings. Blue chroma of males was correlated with male mating success. We experimentally manipulated yearling birds with testosterone implants and found that testosterone-implanted males had imp…

MaleAgingNatural selectionWingbiologyEcologyField dataZoologyOrnamentsTetraoPigments BiologicalFeathersBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationAnimal CommunicationSexual Behavior AnimalSexual selectionAndrogensComb and WattlesAnimalsTestosteroneGalliformesMatingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsThe American Naturalist
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Restrictive mating by females on black grouse leks

2007

In bird species with pair bonds, extra-pair matings could allow females to choose genetically superior males. This is not needed in lekking species because female choice is not constrained by pairing opportunities. However, polyandry has been reported in most lekking species studied so far. Using 12 microsatellite loci, we determined the paternity of 135 broods of black grouse sampled between 2001 and 2005 (970 hatchlings and 811 adult birds genotyped). The paternity assignments were combined to lek observations to investigate the mating behaviour of black grouse females. About 10% of the matings seemed to take place with males displaying solitarily. Forty per cent of the copulations betwee…

MaleGenotypeGrouseZoologyLinkage DisequilibriumSexual Behavior AnimalLek matingGene FrequencyGeneticsAnimalsGalliformesMatingHatchlingSperm competitionreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBehavior AnimalbiologyEcologyBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationPedigreeMate choiceSexual selectionbehavior and behavior mechanismsFemaleMicrosatellite RepeatsMolecular Ecology
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Limited indirect fitness benefits of male group membership in a lekking species

2014

In group living species, individuals may gain the indirect fitness benefits characterizing kin selection when groups contain close relatives. However, tests of kin selection have primarily focused on cooperatively breeding and eusocial species, whereas its importance in other forms of group living remains to be fully understood. Lekking is a form of grouping where males display on small aggregated territories, which females then visit to mate. As females prefer larger aggregations, territorial males might gain indirect fitness benefits if their presence increases the fitness of close relatives. Previous studies have tested specific predictions of kin selection models using measures such as …

MaleGenotypeKin recognitionPopulationTetraoKin selectionBiologySexual Behavior AnimalLek matingGeneticsAnimalsGalliformesSocial BehavioreducationFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicseducation.field_of_studyModels StatisticalEcologySequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationBlack grouseEusocialitySexual selectionta1181FemaleGenetic FitnessC180 EcologyMicrosatellite RepeatsDemography
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Inbreeding depression and male fitness in black grouse

2002

The male lifetime lekking performance was studied, and related to inbreeding-outbreeding in a wild population of black grouse (Tetrao tetrix) in central Finland between 1989 and 1995. Inbreeding was measured as the mean heterozygosity and mean d(2) of 15 microsatellite loci. We found a significantly positive relationship between mean d(2) and lifetime copulation success (LCS), while the relationship between heterozygosity and LCS was close to significant. We also found that males that never obtained a lek territory had significantly lower mean heterozygosity than males that were observed on a territory at least during one mating season in their life. Furthermore, among males that were succe…

MaleHeterozygotePopulationTetraoGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyBirdsLoss of heterozygosityLek matingInbreeding depressionSeasonal breederAnimalsInbreedingeducationGeneral Environmental Scienceeducation.field_of_studyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyEcologyReproductionGeneral MedicineBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationGenetics PopulationGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesInbreedingMicrosatellite RepeatsResearch ArticleDemographyProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
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Life-history differences in age-dependent expressions of multiple ornaments and behaviors in a lekking bird

2015

Age is a major factor explaining variation in life-history traits among individuals with typical patterns of increasing trait values early in life, maximum trait expression, and senescence. However, age-dependent variation in the expressions of sexually selected traits has received less attention, although such variation underpins differences in male competitive abilities and female preference, which are central to sexual selection. In contrast to previous studies focusing on single traits, we used repeated measures of seven sexually selected morphological and behavioral traits in male black grouse (Tetrao tetrix) to quantify the effects of age and life span on their expressions and quantif…

MaleSenescenceAgingsenescenceTetraoBiologyleklong-term dataSexual Behavior AnimalLek matingSeasonal breederAnimalsGalliformesSocial BehaviorFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSex CharacteristicsEcologyReproductionagingBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationPhenotypeVariation (linguistics)Sexual selectionindividual improvementTraitta1181D300 Animal ScienceFemalelife spanDemography
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Simultaneous age‐dependent and age‐independent sexual selection in the lekking black grouse(Lyrurus tetrix)

2014

Individuals' reproductive success is often strongly associated with their age, with typical patterns of early‐life reproductive improvement and late‐life senescence. These age‐related patterns are due to the inherent trade‐offs between life‐history traits competing for a limited amount of resources available to the organisms. In males, such trade‐offs are exacerbated by the resource requirements associated with the expression of costly sexual traits, leading to dynamic changes in trait expression throughout their life span. Due to the age dependency of male phenotypes, the relationship between the expression of male traits and mating success can also vary with male age. Hence, using longitu…

MaleTetrao tetrix0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineAgingsenescencemating successBiologylekselection gradient010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesLife history theorylong-term dataSexual Behavior Animal03 medical and health sciencesReproductive senescenceannual reproductive successLek matingAnimalsGalliformes10. No inequalityLife History TraitsFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSex CharacteristicsReproductive successselection differentialEcologyReproductionAge FactorsBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationfitnessPhenotype030104 developmental biologyMate choiceSexual selectionAnimal Science and ZoologyDemographySex characteristicsJournal of Animal Ecology
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Lekking in the black grouse— a test of male viability

1991

LEKS, where males congregate to display and females attend only to mate, present one of the most remarkable outcomes of sexual selection1. It is a common but untested belief that females mate with the most vigorous males2. In leks of the black grouse Tetrao tetrix, males dominant in winter flocks were most successful in mating, as were males winning fights over female dummies placed at territory boundaries. Males tear feathers from each others' tail ornaments in combats, and attractive males always had undamaged tails. We report here that by choosing victorious males, females mate with males that are most likely to survive the following six months. There is a strong association between fema…

MultidisciplinarybiologyOffspringEcologyTetraoOrnamentsBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationLek matingFeathervisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumFlockMatingDemographyNature
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Female-female aggression and female mate choice on black grouse leks.

2000

We studied female-female aggression in relation to female mate choice in black grouse, Tetrao tetrix, in central Finland, in 1994-1998. Aggression occurred on average every other minute when there was more than one female on a territory, and aggressive behaviour was most prominent when several females attended the lek. Interactions tended to be proportionally most frequent on the territories of the highest-ranking males, although not significantly so. Females that were chased by other females did not mate with lower-ranking males than their aggressors did. Furthermore, chased females were only rarely (6% of cases) forced to move off the territory by agonistic interactions and copulations we…

biologyAggressionTetraoBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationWillow ptarmiganMate choiceSexual selectionAgonistic behaviourmedicineAnimal Science and ZoologyMatingmedicine.symptomSocial psychologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographyAnimal behaviour
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Responses of Male and Female Black Grouse to Male Vocal Display

2010

The evolution of leks may be explained by several hypotheses. The ‘female preference’ hypothesis, which states that females favour males that have aggregated, has recently gained some empirical support. Low-quality, unattractive males may, however, settle near attractive males, as predicted by the ‘hotshot’ hypothesis. We tested whether black grouse Tetrao tetrix females use auditory cues to find the preferred leks, and whether males respond to vocal display emitted on leks. We conducted a playback experiment with male vocal display (rookooing) on leks, where the visiting females and displaying males were counted. The number of males tended to increase more on playback leks. Specifically, t…

biologyAnimal Science and ZoologyTetraoBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationSocial psychologyChoice testEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsYoung maleVisual contactDemographyEthology
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