Blind date: female fossorial amphisbaenians prefer scent marks of large and healthy males.

Integr Zool

Departmento de Ecología Evolutiva, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Madrid, Spain.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how female Iberian worm lizards choose mates based on chemical signaling, given their underground habitat limits visual cues.
  • Results show females prefer scent marks from males that are larger and have a stronger immune response, highlighting the importance of chemical signals over visual ones in mate selection.
  • Chemical analysis reveals certain compounds in the males' scent marks correlate with their size and health, suggesting females use these scents to find high-quality mates in their restricted environment.

Article Abstract

Selecting a good mate is a decision with important fitness consequences. For this reason, mate choice has promoted the evolution of sexual ornaments signaling the quality of an individual. In fossorial animals, inhabiting visually restricted underground environments, chemical senses should be very important for mate choice. We examined whether sexual chemical signals (substrate scent marks) produced by males of the Iberian worm lizard, Blanus cinereus, a strictly fossorial blind amphisbaenian, provide information to females on morphological traits and health state. We administered corticosterone (CORT) to males simulating a continuous stressor affecting their health. Females preferred settling at sites scent-marked by males in comparison with similar sites with female scent or unmarked sites, but the attractiveness of males' scent differed between individuals. Females preferred scent marks of larger/older males and with a higher immune response, while their body condition and CORT treatment were unrelated to female preferences. Chemical analyses showed that proportions of some compounds in precloacal secretions of males (used to produce scent marks) were correlated with the morphological (body size) and health state (immune response and body condition, but not CORT treatment) of these males. These results suggest that females may make site-selection decisions based on assessing the chemical characteristics of males' scent marks, which were reliably related to some of the traits of the male that produced the scent. Therefore, females might use chemical senses to increase the opportunities to find and mate with males of high quality, coping with the restrictions of the subterranean environment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1749-4877.12802DOI Listing

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