AI Article Synopsis

  • The traditional view of mating dynamics suggests competitive males influence female mate selection, but recent studies highlight competitive females and choosy males as well.
  • This study tested the "reliable indicator hypothesis" in baboons by examining if female sexual swellings impact male mate guarding behaviors and female reproductive success.
  • Results showed that male baboons preferred females with more sexual cycles post-pregnancy, contradicting the idea that larger swellings indicate better female fitness or competition for mates.

Article Abstract

The paradigm of competitive males vying to influence female mate choice has been repeatedly upheld, but, increasingly, studies also report competitive females and choosy males. One female trait that is commonly proposed to influence male mate choice is the exaggerated sexual swelling displayed by females of many Old World primate species. The reliable indicator hypothesis posits that females use the exaggerated swellings to compete for access to mates, and that the swellings advertise variation in female fitness. We tested the two main predictions of this hypothesis in a wild population of baboons (. First, we examined the effect of swelling size on the probability of mate-guarding ('consortship') by the highest-ranking male and the behavior of those males that trailed consorshipts ('follower males'). Second, we asked whether a female's swelling size predicted several fitness measures. We found that high-ranking males do not prefer females with larger swellings (when controlling for cycle number and conception) and that females with larger swellings did not have higher reproductive success. Our study-the only complete test of the reliable indicator hypothesis in a primate population-rejects the idea that female baboons compete for mates by advertising heritable fitness differences. Furthermore, we found unambiguous evidence that males biased their mating decisions in favor of females who had experienced more sexual cycles since their most recent pregnancy. Thus, rather than tracking the potential differences in fitness between females, male baboons appear to track and target the potential for a given reproductive opportunity to result in fertilization.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4704114PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2015.03.019DOI Listing

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