AI Article Synopsis

  • Birds select mates based on visual cues like color and body size, with new research indicating this decision-making process may be lateralized in the brain.
  • The study focused on Gouldian finches, revealing that black males strongly prefer black females using their right eye, which is linked to their left-hemisphere brain activity.
  • The findings show that without access to their right eye, these males can't effectively choose mates, suggesting that visual preferences in mate selection are significantly influenced by the eye and corresponding brain hemisphere used.

Article Abstract

Birds choose mates on the basis of colour, song and body size, but little is known about the mechanisms underlying these mating decisions. Reports that zebra finches prefer to view mates with the right eye during courtship, and that immediate early gene expression associated with courtship behaviour is lateralized in their left hemisphere suggest that visual mate choice itself may be lateralized. To test this hypothesis, we used the Gouldian finch, a polymorphic species in which individuals exhibit strong, adaptive visual preferences for mates of their own head colour. Black males were tested in a mate-choice apparatus under three eye conditions: left-monocular, right-monocular and binocular. We found that black male preference for black females is so strongly lateralized in the right-eye/left-hemisphere system that if the right eye is unavailable, males are unable to respond preferentially, not only to males and females of the same morph, but also to the strikingly dissimilar female morphs. Courtship singing is consistent with these lateralized mate preferences; more black males sing to black females when using their right eye than when using their left. Beauty, therefore, is in the right eye of the beholder for these songbirds, providing, to our knowledge, the first demonstration of visual mate choice lateralization.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3497153PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2012.0830DOI Listing

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