Animal Behaviour - Animal Courtship
Animal Behaviour - Animal Courtship
Courtship
AnimAl BehAvior t
Animal Communication Animal Courtship Animal Defenses Animal Hunting and Feeding Animal Life in Groups Animal Migration
animal
Courtship
Krista WEst
Animal Behavior: Animal Courtship Copyright 2009 by Infobase Publishing All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher. For information, contact: Chelsea House An imprint of Infobase Publishing 132 West 31st Street New York NY 10001 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data West, Krista. Animal courtship / Krista West. p. cm. (Animal behavior) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-60413-090-4 (hardcover) 1. Courtship in animals. I. Title. II. Series. QL761.W43 2009 591.562dc22 2008040121 Chelsea House books are available at special discounts when purchased in bulk quantities for businesses, associations, institutions, or sales promotions. Please call our Special Sales Department in New York at (212) 967-8800 or (800) 322-8755. You can find Chelsea House on the World Wide Web at http://www.chelseahouse.com Text design by Kerry Casey Cover design by Ben Peterson and Alicia Post Printed in the United States Bang EJB 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 This book is printed on acid-free paper. All links and Web addresses were checked and verified to be correct at the time of publication. Because of the dynamic nature of the Web, some addresses and links may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. Cover: A pair of king penguins playfully interact.
Contents
1 Human Courtship 2 The Natural History of Courtship 3 Insect and Arachnid Courtship 4 Fish and Shellsh Courtship 5 Reptile and Amphibian Courtship 6 Bird Courtship Mammal Courtship 8 How Courtship Research is Gathered
Glossary Bibliography Further Resources Picture Credits Index About the Author
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Human Courtship
If she do frown, tis not in hate of you, But rather to beget more love in you: If she do chide, tis not to have you gone; For whay, the fools are mad if left alone. Take no repulse, whatever she doth say; Forget you goneshe doth not meanaway.
William Shakespeare (15641616), The Two Gentlemen of Verona
english poet And plAywright William Shakespeare (1564-1616) often wrote about the complicated relationships between love-struck men and women. In this quote, from the play The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Shakespeare describes a woman that acts harshly toward a man, but is romantically interested in him at the same time. He wrote the play nearly 500 years ago. Today, courtship between two humans is no less complicated. Courtship occurs when one person attempts to win the love and affection of another. It often results in two mature members of a species becoming a couple, and many sexually mature animals practice courtship with the intent to mate and produce offspring (children).
AnimAl courtship
In the animal world, species of insects, birds, fish, shellfish, reptiles, amphibians, and mammals each have their own sets of courtship rules and rituals. Some species dance to attract a mate. Some glow. Others talk or sing. Some attack and fight. Humans may flirt or act disinterested. Human courtship is complicated by human culture. Shakespeare, perhaps as much as anyone, seemed to understand these two basic parts. There is a biological side of human courtship the desire to produce healthy offspringthat affects everything that dating humans do. But there is also a cultural side of human courtshipthe desire for love and romancethat affects the process as well.
Flirting
Traditionally, flirting is the first step of human courtship. Flirting involves different actions that are used to attract attention. As it turns out, humans are pre-programmed to flirt.
human courtship
Flirting is usually the rst step of human courtship. The act was particularly innocent and playful during the Victorian era (mid-to-late 1800s), as portrayed in this image.
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Sociologistsscientists interested in the behavior of humansspend hours watching men and women court each other in public places. They have found that the flirting process for men and women is fairly standard. A woman might smile at a man, lift her eyebrows, and open her eyes wide. Then she quickly tilts and drops her head, breaking her gaze. Frequently, says Fisher, she also covers her face with her hands, giggling nervously as she retreats behind her palms. These brief periods of contact convey a womans interest while protecting her at the same time. Likewise, men have a predictable set of flirting behaviors. A man might respond to a woman by arching his back and thrusting out his chest in an effort to show strength and dominance. Many male animals attempt to look big, strong, and puff up when flirting. Codfish stick out their heads and fins. Snakes, frogs, and toads inflate their bodies. Antelope, deer, and chameleons turn sideways to show their big bodies. Cats arch their backs and bristle their fur. Lobsters open their claws and stand tall. Gorillas pound their chests. Human men, it seems, attempt to look big and strong during courtship as well.
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women to wear veils and prevent eye contact between men and women.
dancing together
According to anthropologist David Givens and biologist Timothy Perper, as reported in a Psychology Today article entitled, The Biology of Attraction, the human courtship dance has a few basic steps. First, courting humans establish a territory. A man or woman chooses a seat, leans against a table, or takes a spot at the bar. This is the territory in which he or she feels comfortable. Next, the man or woman moves in ways that attract the attention of other humans. A man may stretch or swagger when he walks. A woman may twist her hair or arch her back. These movements attract attention and give people something to do with their nervous energy.
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If two individuals are interested in one another, the final step happens when the pair begins to move in the same ways. A couple may turn their chairs or move to face each other until their shoulders are aligned. Then they begin to move in tandem. When he crosses his legs, she crosses hers. First she leans left, and then he does. Dancing together is another part of human courtship.
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Modern human courtship is likely quite different from the courtship process between early humans. As British scientist W.P. Pycraft first wrote in his book The Courtship of Animals in 1914 (republished in 2007), in order to understand modern human courtship, We must get back, so far as is possible, to the very dawn of the human race: to that period of mans evolution when his conduct was controlled by purely savage instincts. These purely savage instincts meant that early humans formed couples quickly, in order to mate and have children. They probably did not fall in love. Yet, as human culture developed,
COMPUTERIZED COURTSHIP
humans have long used culture-based matchmaking tools to meet potential mates. they have written love letters, gone on blind dates, talked to fortunetellers, and placed or answered newspaper personals. meeting and talking via computer is the latest cultural matchmaking tool. online dating allows people to nd and meet others online, and to get to know them through e-mail or instant messaging. An online dater might use an online dating service to post personal information. the person might include a photo, likes and dislikes, hobbies, his or her age, as well as whether or not he or she smokes, has children or wants children, and more. that person is then able to electronically search the web and nd the personal information of other individuals. the purpose is to help users nd potential matches quickly using his or her personal search criteria. if the online dater nds someone interesting, he or she would likely send an introductory e-mail. ultimately, if the over(continues)
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(continued) the-computer conversations go well, a more traditional, face-to-face meeting might be arranged. online dating has become a serious and widespread way for men and women to meet, according to the nonprot pew internet & American life project (piAlp), an organization dedicated to exploring the impact of the internet on society. the piAlps 2006 report, Online Dating, found that: 6 About 63 million people31% of American adultssaid they know someone who has used a dating web site. About 53 million people26% of American adults said they know someone who has gone on a date with a person they met through a dating web site. About 30 million people15% of American adultssaid they know someone who has been in a long-term relationship or who has married someone who was met online.
online dating was once considered a matchmaking tool for a small number of people. now, millions of people use online dating services to nd potential mates. the biological goals of courtship are still part of the process, but the human computer culture is a signicant part as well.
human courtship developed as well. Soon, love became a part of the process. Some suggest that romantic love first became a requirement for human courtship sometime in the Middle Ages in Europe (between the fifth and fifteenth centuries). Or, at least, this
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is when people first started to write about and record tales of human love. During this time, the idea of courtly love became widespread. Courtly love is a combination of physical desire and a deeply emotional desire for another person. People thought that experiencing courtly love could make them nobler, stronger, and happier. British knights King Arthur and Sir Lancelot often felt empowered by romantic love for Queen Guinevere. Yet, with the powerful force of courtly love came strict rules to keep this force under control. Cultures developed courtship rules. In many non-Western cultures, arranged marriages became common. Parents or families set up a marriage based on practical factors, such as social class and income. They hoped that romantic love would develop once the couple got together. Arranged marriages are still common in some parts of the world and among some religions today. In many North American and European cultures, by contrast, each person is responsible for finding his or her own mate, or choosing not to find one at all. In these cultures, finding someone who strongly appeals to the human senseswith the potential for loveis a major part of the courtship process.
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The Natural History of Courtship
AnimAl courtship is one small part of the natural historyor study of plants and animals in their natural environmentsof life on Earth. By studying a plant or animals natural history, scientists can help understand it. Natural history helps explain various traits, such as why animals eat what they eat, why they look the way they look, and why they act the way they act. Together, the actions and appearances resulting from an animals natural history work as a set of tools. Some of these tools are used during the courtship process. The tools of animal courtship fall into two basic categories: physical characteristics and behaviors. A physical characteristic is something that can be seen on an animals body, such as a color or an appendage (for example, a feather or a fin). A behavior is a response of an organism to signals or individuals in its environment, such as a song or a movement. These physical characteristics and behaviors are the products of natural history. They have evolved over time because they helped animals survive and reproduce. One behavior may help an animal find food, or a certain physical characteristic may help an animal defend itself from other animals.
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Charles Darwins theory of natural selection helped explain how physical and behavioral advantages helped animals survive and therefore reproduce and pass on their specic traits.
One of the first people to document these tools of natural history was British scientist Charles Darwin (1809-1882). Before Darwin, there was no scientific reason for why a peacock maintains its huge, colorful feathers. Darwin is famous for helping to
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explain the physical characteristics and behaviors observed in the natural world, including things that happen during animal courtship. Most of his scientific ideas and explanations still stand true today.
darwins research
Darwin first came up with his ideas of natural selection by looking at the world around him. The son of a successful country
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doctor, the 22-year-old Darwin sailed around the world for five years on a 90-foot ship called the HMS Beagle. The voyage began in December 1831. His thoughts and writings from this trip eventually became one of the most influential books of all time: The Origin of Species. When Darwin joined the expedition, he considered himself an amateur scientist. However, he was recruited for the voyage largely because the captain, Robert Fitzroy, wanted someone to keep him company. After years sailing up and down the western coast of South America, mapping the edges of the continent, the sailors spent five weeks exploring the Galapagos Islands. It was in this land of giant tortoises and diverse birds that Darwin first began to develop his idea of natural selection. Darwin noticed that many of the animals living in the Galapagos Islands looked a lot like the animals living on mainland South America, but they were not exactly the same. Further, there were small differences between animals living on the different islands within the Galapagos. Each island tortoise, for example, had its own distinct shell design. The shells were similar, but unique to each small island. From these observations, Darwin concluded that animals from South America had colonized the Galapagos Islands, and that each population of animals had changed slightly over time to survive in each new environment. The idea that different but similar animals existed was not ground breaking. However, Darwin was the first person to suggest a mechanism, or series of steps, for how these animals were created. Darwin called this mechanism natural selection (also called the survival of the fittest). The theory of natural selection includes the idea that animals with physical or behavioral advantages are most likely to survive and reproduce into the next generation, passing along their advantageous traits to their offspring.
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Over time, these advantageous traits change a population of animals so that it looks or acts differently than before. Eventually, a population may change so much that it becomes a new species. During Darwins time, no one understood exactly how such traits were passed from generation to generation. Most people believed that God created and designed all life and all animals, and that new animals did not evolve naturally (some people still believe this is the case; they are called creationists.) When Darwin first published his theory of natural selection in The Origin of Species in 1859, he used his observations from the HMS Beagle voyage to support his ideas. He became the first British scientist to argue that God is not solely responsible for creating new animals. The claim was not an easy one for him to make.
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As early as 1844, Darwin wrote to a friend that to publish his thoughts on evolution would be akin to confessing a murder. Today, the apparent conflict between religion and science continues. Modern-day, literal readers of the Bible believe that God created the Earth and all of life in six daysan idea known as creationism. The Origin of Species explains how the creation of life on Earth took place over millions of yearsthe theory of evolution. Present-day creationists argue that evolution is unproven. Most scientists say that the evidence for evolution is clear. Recently, some people have combined creationism and evolution in a concept known as intelligent design. Intelligent design contends that evolution cannot be the only force that shapes life on Earth because life is so clever that it must have an intelligent designer. This idea says that evolution does happen, but it is only possible with Gods influence. There is no science to prove intelligent design, but it continues to prompt debate among creationists and evolutionists. The November 2005 issue of Natural History Magazine was devoted to Charles Darwin. In that issue, scientist and science writer Richard Dawkins writes about natural selection: People have a hard time believing that so simple a mechanism could deliver such powerful results. Yet, he argues, the mechanism of natural selection has resulted in life forms that look deliberately designed. Perhaps Darwin had a hard time believing in the power of natural selection as well. In the last years of his life, Darwin suffered from mysterious stomach and heart troubles. Some experts said he might have picked up a parasite while traveling in South America. Others believe Darwin was anxious about where his thoughts on evolution might lead him and the rest of the world. Legend has it that on his deathbed, Darwin confessed his sinful thoughts on evolution and repented, but his family always
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has denied such claims. Darwin died in 1882 and was entombed with honor at Westminster Abbey.
seXuAl selection
Natural selection explained much of what Darwin observed during his trip through South America and the Galapagos Islands. Yet, it could not explain everything. Why, Darwin wondered, did some creatures maintain elaborate or cumbersome traits without clear functions? The answer, Darwin reasoned, has its roots in animal courtship.
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Peacock feathers are the classic example of a costly trait that cant be explained by natural selection alone. The feathers are costly because they require a lot of energy to grow (just as healthy hair for humans requires a good diet). They are also large
Darwins theory of sexual selection explains that while a peacocks feathers give the bird no clear survival advantage, their attractiveness to potential mates is the reason they continue to be passed on genetically.
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and heavy. This makes it difficult for peacocks to move around and to hide from potential dangers. According to Darwins theory of natural selection, traits are passed on from generation to generation only if they give each animal some advantage. Yet, peacock feathers, at first glance, appear to offer only disadvantages. To explain the development of peacock feathers (and other similar animal features), Darwin developed the theory of sexual selection. The theory of sexual selection says that traits that increase an animals success during courtship and mating are favored from generation to generation. Behaviors or appearances that make one animal attractive to the opposite sex during courtship ultimately are passed on to offspring. Peacock feathers, according to Darwins theory, are the result of sexual selection. Today, scientists understand that many of the physical differences between males and females are the result of sexual selection. At the same time, sexual selection is the driving force behind the courtship behaviors of many animals.
physical characteristics
A physical characteristic is an observable body part, such as a color or an appendage (for example, a feather or a fin). Darwin realized that sexual selection allows animals to develop specialized physical characteristics for two main reasons: to fight and to show off. Some male animals develop specialized physical characteristics to help them compete for access to mate with females. Horns, antlers, and body size can give one male an advantage over another during battle for a female. Body size is one of the most common examples of a physical characteristic that results from sexual selection. In many animals, the male is larger than the female. Male elephant seals, for example, can be 18 feet (5.5 m) long and weigh 5,000 pounds
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These elephant seals lined up on the beach at Sea Lion Island in the Falkland Islands illustrate the size difference between males and females. A male (left) lies with a female ( middle) and a younger sea lion. left left)
(2,270 kg). Females are about 10 feet (3 m) long and weigh 1,430 pounds (650 kg). The larger size of the males is attributed to sexual selection. The larger a male elephant seal is, the better he can fight off other males for a chance to mate. Males may have physical characteristics that allow them to show off for females. Vivid colors and patterns, elaborate feathers, or other physical frills help males to appeal to potential mates. The male green anole lizard, for example, has a bright red, bubble-like flap of skin under its throat. When courting a female anole, the male inflates its red throat while bobbing its head up and down. Both the red color and the eye-catching inflatable
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A male anole can extend a reddish ap of skin, called a dewlap, on its neck. The dewlap is prominent when the male is trying to attract a female or defend territory.
bubble are the products of sexual selection, helping make the male more attractive to a female. Physical characteristics that can be altered by sexual selection are known as secondary sex characteristics. In many animals, the males display most of these secondary sex characteristics.
Behaviors
A behavior is the response of an organism to its environment. During animal courtship, males and females use behaviors such as dancing, vocalizing, and gesturing to make themselves more
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attractive to potential mates. Through sexual selection, these behaviors are passed on from generation to generation. To get the attention of females, the male frigate bird combines unusual physical characteristics with a mating dance and a
A male frigate bird entices females to mate by inating its gulgar sac a large throat bag. When a female ies overhead, the male will move its head side-to-side and shake its wings while calling out to the female. If shes interested, shell land beside the male.
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mating call. These large black birds can take 20 minutes to inflate their bright red throats like balloons. They then wait for females to fly overhead. When a male sees a female, he wags his head from side to side, shakes his wings, and calls. If the dance is successful, the flying female will land and mate with the male.
nAturAl reActions
The frigate bird, like many other birds, uses calls and songs to attract females. Many other animals use behaviors to attract mates. Spiders dance. Frogs croak and sing. Some monkeys use color to stand out. The rituals of animal courtship are diverse and detailed, and not yet entirely understood. Scientists still have much to learn.
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Insect and Arachnid Courtship
together, insects And ArAchnids are the most common and most diverse group of animals on the planet. They can all be found in a large group of animals called the arthropods. Insects are small invertebrate animals with three pairs of legs, one or two pairs of wings, and three main body sections. Insects include beetles, butterflies, flies, and ants. Arachnids have a body in two segments, four pairs of legs, and no antennae or wings. Examples of them include spiders, ticks, and scorpions. By some estimates, arthropods account for more than 9 out of every 10 animals on Earth. The population alone is very large and diverse. Scientists say there are more different kinds of arthropods on Earth than all other types of animals combined. These creatures live in many places and have many different courtship rituals. Insects and arachnids often use physical toolsincluding movements, gestures, touch, and even lightduring courtship. Many spiders, for example, dance and jump during courtship. Butterflies flit and float in the air. Fireflies light up. Other insects and arachnids touch tails or antennae to communicate
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during courtship. Each of these physical signals works to help them recognize others of their kind, or species.
Beetle courtship
A beetle is an insect with a rigid wing. About 40% of all insects are beetles, and new species are discovered almost every day. Beetles live everywhere on Earth except in the oceans and the
Mating between two dung beetles may occur within a ball of dung.
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polar regions. During courtship, they often use physical aggression, scent, and light. Some types of male dung beetles have horns on their heads. They use the horns to fight with other males for a females attention. Other dung beetle varieties have antennae that help them sniff out potential mates. Dung beetles feed on the dung, or solid wastes, of other animals. During courtship, the male and female often mate underground or inside a ball of dung. The female lays eggs in the dung. When the eggs hatch, they have a food source waiting. Dung
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beetles are common in the United States. They are often used to control solid waste on cattle farms. A different type of beetle uses light to attract a mate during courtship: the firefly, or lightning bug. Adult male fireflies spend every evening of their lives flashing their lights to attract females. A male will fly a few feet above the ground and flash its light in a specific pattern. The females sit on the ground. A female responds to a male with a single flash. The male lands, finds the female, and mating begins. Males seeking mates must be careful thoughfemale fireflies of some species will trick unsuspecting males. These tricky females will match the light patterns of other species, drawing males looking for mates. Yet, instead of mating, the females will eat the males.
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the female. Others are cap-like structures that are put in place after mating. Many male insects use mating plugs to keep females from mating with other males, but the method is particularly common in butterflies.
cocKroAch courtship
Cockroaches are common insects that live in many environments on Earth. They are often considered city pests, but only a small number of cockroach varieties live in cities. Most cockroaches live in rural areas and tropical places. During courtship, female cockroaches typically use gestures and scent. Males use gestures and songs. A female cockroach often begins the courtship process by stretching her lower body and raising her wings. She then sends out a chemical signal called a pheromone from her back. If a male picks up the signal, he approaches her. Typically, the male and female will touch antennae in a sword-like fight before mating. Some varieties of cockroaches, including the hissing cockroach of Madagascar, will also sing during courtship. Males produce a loud hiss that can be heard by humans up to 12 feet (3.7 meters) away. The males hiss when fighting with other males for a female, when courting a female, and during mating.
scorpion courtship
Scorpions are distinct-looking arachnids. They have very poor eyesight and can only see about an inch in front of them. Yet, they have a very sensitive sense of touch. A scorpions body is covered with tiny hairs, which the scorpion uses as feelers. Not surprisingly, the sense of touch is the most important tool used during scorpion courtship.
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Female Madagascar hissing cockroaches are attracted by loud male hisses during courtship.
On the undersides of a scorpions body are specialized organs used for touch called pectines. Pectines look different in male and female scorpions, and scientists suspect scorpions use pectines to help distinguish between males and females of their own kind during courtship.
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Scorpions raise and link their tales together during courtship, which leads to a courtship dance.
When two scorpions are courting, they approach each other face-to-face. Then they raise and intertwine their tails. (Although the tails can sting humans and other animals, scorpions are immune to the stings.) The male will often pull the female along in a sort of dance, which can last many hours in some varieties of scorpion, until the two find a place to mate. After courtship and mating is complete, the female scorpion sometimes eats the male. This happens among many other arachnids, too. Scientists suspect much of the courtship dance is the males way of telling the female that he is not just a piece of food. He wants to mate first.
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spider courtship
Both male and female spiders have special courtship tools. Female spiders dominate courtship in size and behavior, but male spiders have their own set of physical tools and gestures. Females usually control the courtship and mating process of spiders, and display strong sexual dimorphism. Sexual dimorphism occurs when males and females of the same type of animal are different sizes or colors, or have different body parts. The female spiders are often much larger than the males, and most do not hesitate to eat the males. Some female spiders, such as the Australian redback spider, are known for devouring males immediately after (or even during) mating.
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(continued) shows the smaller, male spider presenting the larger female with a meal as a mating gift: a y wrapped in a web. if the female accepts the gift, the male will wait until the females fangs are safely embedded in the meal. then he will mate with her while she eats. this illustration is displayed in the public galleries at the natural history museum. smith is most famous for drawing insects, but he also drew other animals, rocks, and landscape scenes.
Perhaps as a result of this female dominance, male spiders have developed a diverse set of skills. In some species of spiders, the male will simply run to the female and mate with her. Yet, in most species, the process is more complicated. In many species, a male spider will pluck or dance on a females web. This lets the female know that he is a courting male, rather than just a juicy meal. In other species, a male entertains a female while they mate. A male crab spider will wrap the female in silk while they mate. The male European nursery web spider presents a dead fly to the female for a meal to eat while mating. In still other species, the male holds the jaws of the female open with his legs to keep from being eaten during mating. A male spider uses a special set of arm-like appendages called pedipalps during courtship. They hold sperm and transfer it into the female during mating. If mating occurs more than once, the male refills his pedipalps with sperm.
tough love
Insect and arachnid courtship, it seems, isnt always easy. Its a physical challenge for some. Plus, because many of them are
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natural predators, males risk being eaten by their mates immediately following courtship. This, in part, is what makes insect and arachnid courtship an interesting topic to study.
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Fish and Shellfish Courtship
Fish And shellFish include many animals that are classified in different groups. Most fish with bones and fins are considered one group. Shellfish is a non-scientific term that includes many edible animals without bones, such as clams and crabs. There is quite a bit of variety among these animals. Both goldfish and sharks are fish, but they are very different. Sea urchins, crabs, and squid all are considered shellfish. In many cases, fish and shellfish mating occurs outside the animals bodies. They release eggs and sperm into the water, and fertilization happens by chance. Because of this, many fish and shellfish do not choose mating partners, and courtship is not important. But there are exceptions. Many species of fish with courtship rituals do so with the aid of color and movement. Salmon, for example, turn bright red during courtship. Other fish use bright colors to attract potential mates near nests, where eggs and sperm are more likely to meet. Shellfish courtship is more complicated. Shellfish with heads, arms, or legs will use movements and gestures when courting. Male lobsters gently stroke females prior to mating. Shellfish without heads or limbs, such as oysters and sea urchins, have very
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few courtship rituals, if any. Some do use chemical signals to let potential mates know that they are ready to reproduce.
Fertilization happens outside the body for echinoderms, such as the sea urchin.
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Fish are found in many environments. They live in obvious places, such as oceans and lakes. Fish also live in high mountain streams, desert springs, cave ponds, and deep ocean trenches. Scientists group almost all fish with fins and bones in a group called the actinopterygians. There are about 24,000 species of actinopterygians on Earth. Shellfish include many groups of animals. Crustaceans include animals with shell-like outer skins, such as crabs and lobsters. Bivalves are animals with two-part shells, such as clams and oysters. Some cephalopods have inner shells; these include octopuses and squids. Echinoderms are a group of animals with spiny or rigid skins. Sea stars and sea urchins are echinoderms. There are about 30,000 varieties of crustaceans, 15,000 different kinds of bivalves, 700 varieties of cephalopods, and about 7,000 different types of echinoderms. Some bivalves and crustaceans live in fresh water, but most other shellfish live in the salty waters of oceans.
Fish courtship
Fish courtship is a little different than the courtship of many other animals. Fish can mate without touching each other. A female fish deposits a package of eggs underwater. A male fish swims over the eggs and fertilizes them. The courtship that leads up to this mating depends on the type of fish, but it often involves color and movement. Fish may change color during courtship. This shows that they are ready to mate. Then, the male and female may dance before mating. Salmon are known for their color changes, while sticklebacks are known for their mating dance. Salmon is a name for several varieties of fish. Before they mate, salmon leave the oceans where they live their adult lives
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A male stickleback sh builds a nest, which will be used as a place to fertilize a females eggs.
and travel inland to the same freshwater streams in which they were born. As the salmon travel upstream, they slowly change color. They go from silvery-blue to vibrant reds and pinks. Once upstream, the females will deposit packages of eggs on the stream bottom for the males to fertilize. Once the female lays her eggs, her role in mating is finished. Some studies have found that males prefer to fertilize the eggs of red females. The females red color is sending some sort of courtship signal to the male, but researchers dont know why males prefer red females. A two-inch-long, freshwater fish called the stickleback also has a preference for red. Here, females appear to prefer
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depositing eggs in the nests of red males. But researchers dont know why this happens, either. Scientists have studied the sticklebacks courtship dance, though. During courtship, a male stickleback sets up a nest made of bits of plant matter. Then, he zigzags over the nest to attract passing females. If a female is interested, she stops and dances with the male, and the male swims around to display his nest more thoroughly. Successful courtship occurs when the female deposits her eggs in the nest and a male fertilizes them. Sometimes it is the nest-building male that fertilizes the eggs; other times a different male will sneak in to fertilize the eggs instead.
crustAceAn courtship
Crustaceans include most sea creatures with outer shells and claws, such as crabs, lobsters, and shrimp. Crustaceans are arthropods, just like spiders. Like many of their fellow arthropods, crustaceans use physical gestures and movements to attract mates during courtship. Crabs come in all shapes and sizes, and can live in saltwater, freshwater, or on land. As a result of this diversity, crab courtship is diverse as well. In general, many crabs wave their claws and dance to attract the attention of mates. Once a male and female find each other, the male will often carry the female on its back until the female molts, or sheds, her outer shell. While the female is forming her new, larger shell, she is ready to mate. The courtship rituals of blue crabs of the Chesapeake Bay, off the coasts of Maryland and Virginia, are fairly typical. Courtship begins when a male stands up on his legs and waves his claws at a female. If interested, the female responds by waving her claws. The two touch claws and the male carries the female on his back for up to seven days, until she sheds her old shell. The two mate while her new shell is still soft.
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A male blue crab waves its claws at a female for attention. If she waves back, the mating process begins.
Physical contact also is important during lobster courtship. Once a female lobster is admitted into the burrow of a male, a gentle boxing match begins. The two touch claws, and the male strokes the female lobster. She soon sheds her shell, and the lobsters mate. The female stays in the males burrow after mating until her shell hardens. Then, she goes on her way.
cephAlopod courtship
Cephalopodsoctopuses, squids, and cuttlefishare believed to be highly intelligent creatures. They have large brains and good eyesight, and can change the color and texture of their skin
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to match their surroundings. Cephalopods spend much of their time camouflaged to avoid predators. They also use their colorchanging ability during courtship. The cuttlefish is perhaps the most extreme example of a color-courting cephalopod. Often described as amazing, clever, and elaborate, the cuttlefish looks like a cross between an octopus and a squid. It has eight, long arms and a broad body, as well as W-shaped eyes. Male cuttlefish often change color during courtship to attract the attention of females. Using all of his tentacles, a male puts on an elaborate display of colors for the female, ending with a vivid show of vibrant reds. If the show is successful, the male and female interlock their tentacles and mate.
A lively color show from a male cuttle sh can attract a potential mate.
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Many types of octopus use color to attract mates during courtship. Usually, the male octopus begins the display. The color changes depend on the type of octopus. Some turn brown. Some turn red. Some display white polka dots. Some scientists believe the cephalopods cannot see any color at all. Instead, they can detect brightness and patterns. So brightness, not color, is likely the real courtship tool that cephalopods are using. Another type of cephalopod, an animal called the nautilus, is quite different from all the other cephalopods. It has an outer
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shell, moves slowly in deep water, and does not change color. It is believed that the nautilus hasnt changed much in many millions of years. Nautilus courtship is not well understood.
BivAlve courtship
The bivalves include scallops, clams, oysters, and mussels. None have heads, arms, or legs. Most adult bivalves never move; they attach themselves to hard surfaces under water, or bury themselves in dirt. As a result, bivalve courtship and mating dont
An Atlantic salmon jumps upstream in the River Ettrick in Scotland. Salmon and some sea turtles migrate back to the places they were born in order to reproduce; scientists believe they use magnetic elds in the Earth to nd their way back to their spawning grounds.
lion eggs at a time. And many female clams release hundreds of millions of eggs each time they spawn. the more eggs, the better the chance of reproducing successfully.
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really exist. Instead, bivalves release large numbers of eggs and sperm into the water, and leave the rest to chance. Some of the eggs and sperm meet. The sperm fertilize the eggs, and the next generation of bivalves begins. Interestingly, some bivalves can be both male and female at the same timewith the ability to release eggs or sperm. Animals that do this are called hermaphrodites. Many bivalves are hermaphrodites. Others change from male to female, or from female to male, throughout their lives. Many oysters, for example, spend most of their young lives as males, and change into females later in life. Scientists are still studying how and when bivalves change sex. But courtship, in the case of bivalves, is not seen as a vital part of producing offspring.
echinoderm courtship
Echinoderms are a large group of saltwater animals that includes sea stars, sea urchins, and sea cucumbers. Most echinoderms have sticky tube feet that they use to move along hard surfaces. None have heads, or eyes. Perhaps as a result, echinoderm courtship is generally non-existent, or at least very simple. In most cases, echinoderms release their eggs and sperm directly into the surrounding waters and allow fertilization to happen outside of the body. Courtship is not crucial because males and females do not choose mates. They release eggs and sperm when they are ready, regardless of other animals in the area. Yet, in some cases, such as the courtship of the sea cucumber, there appears to be a little more happening. Sea cucumbers have long, leathery, cucumber-like bodies. They scavenge the seafloor for food. When a sea cucumber is ready to mate, some scientists suggest it releases chemicals into the water. These chemicals alert other sea cucumbers that mating is about to happen. Once the chemical signals are sent and a partner has been found, both sea cucumbers arch their bodies like snakes about to
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strike. Then they release their eggs or sperm into the water. In this case, there appears to be some form of courtship and mate choice occurring, though scientists are still studying what exactly happens.
mAny oFFspring
The courtship of fish and shellfish is diverse. Fertilization generally takes place outside of the body, so animals arent always particular about mating partners. For fish and shellfish, it is more important to make as many offspring as possible so that some will survive and reproduce.
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Reptile and Amphibian Courtship
reptiles And AmphiBiAns include most of the animals that slither, hop, or crawl on the ground. Both reptiles and amphibians breathe air, but amphibians need water as well. Amphibians get up to 35% of their oxygen from water by absorbing it through their skin. Reptiles lay eggs that hatch into babies that look just like their parents, only smaller. Snakes, turtles, lizards, crocodiles, and alligators are reptiles. Amphibians lay eggs, too, but they must lay them in water, and the eggs hatch into babies that look nothing like their parents. As the babies develop, they undergo metamorphosis, changing from larva to adult. Frogs and salamanders are amphibians. Reptiles and amphibians use many different courtship tools. Sound is a common courtship tool for these animals, as is touch. Most reptile and amphibian courtship rituals are hard to miss. Alligators and crocodiles bellow, cough, and blow bubbles; frogs croak and whine; lizards change color; snakes and turtles use touch.
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A male alligator rises up and bellows to attract a female. Sound waves from the call cause vibrations in the water that also help attract the mate.
tighten and release its body underwater, creating a very lowtoned sound called infrasound. Humans cannot hear infrasound, but some crocodiles use it during courtship to attract the attention of other crocodiles. They also may use it at other times, to scare off other crocodiles. The courtship rituals of Floridas American crocodile are thought to be as complex as it gets for this group of animals. The male begins the process by slapping his head and vibrating his body. If the female is interested, she tilts her snout and her tail. The two blow bubbles, go swimming, and touch snouts.
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A green sea turtle lays eggs in its nest. The temperature of the nest will determine whether the eggs will produce males or females.
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(continued) this phenomenon is called temperature-dependent sex determination. it was discovered in the 1980s, but scientists dont yet completely understand how it works. some researchers suggest that females can control the sex of their offspring by building nests in warm or cold places. others worry that climate change will affect the numbers of male and female reptiles born each year. yet others argue that temperature-dependent sex determination could be used as a tool to help restore endangered animals.
Once courtship is successful, female alligators and crocodiles lay dozens of eggs in nests on the ground. Sometimes the females return to the nest to check on the eggs and help them hatch. The females job usually ends when the eggs hatch and the offspring take to the water.
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Sound is crucial in the courtship of frogs, and this male green tree frogs puffed throat is ready for croaking.
A typical evening of frog or toad courtship begins when the male calls out to surrounding females. These calls can take many different forms, including whines, chucks, peeps, croaks, and ribbits. Each type of frog or toad has a distinct series of sounds. That helps a female choose a male of the correct species. Tungara frogs, which live in Panama, have been well studied. The males produce a specific series of courtship calls: one whine followed by up to six chucks. Females prefer the calls with the lowest tones. Usually, larger males make the lowest-toned calls. Scientists suspect that females use the calls to help them select the largest males.
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liZArds
Lizards are one of the few reptiles that do not use sound as a primary tool during courtship. Instead, many lizards change colors. Chameleons, one of the best-known groups of lizards, are famous for this ability. Contrary to popular belief, chameleons do not change color just to blend in to their surroundings. They typically change color to send signals to other chameleonsespecially during courtship. Different types of chameleons can turn different shades. Depending on the kind of chameleon, the lizards skin may turn pink, blue, red, orange, green, black, brown, or yellow. Courtship often begins when a male chameleon bobs his head to get a females attention. If she turns a dark color, she is not interested. If she turns a light, pale color, she is interested. The male usually responds with another color change. Scientists are still studying how chameleons communicate using colors. The green anole is another type of lizard. It also can change color, and is often mistaken for a chameleon. A male green anole has a pink or red flap of skin on its neck, known as a dewlap. Males use dewlaps to court females. A male anole bobs his head, inflates the dewlap, and does push-ups to get a females attention. In lizard courtship, color is the key.
snAKes
Snakes are reptiles with worm-like body shapes. They have no legs, feet, hands, arms, or eyelids. They live on every continent except Antarctica. All snakes eat meat, but not all snakes are poisonous. In fact, only a small number of snakes are dangerous to humans. Most snakes dont see very well. They use smell and touch during courtship.
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REPTILES AS PETS
in recent years, reptiles have become popular family pets. in 2005, about 11 million reptiles were kept as pets in this countryan increase of 2 million since 2003. thats a lot of reptiles. most people buy reptiles at pet stores. Before reptiles get to the pet store, they live in the wild. trappers capture reptiles and either sell them to pet stores or keep them and sell their offspring to pet stores. over time, this hurts wild reptile populations and destroys habitats. each year, about 2 million reptiles are brought into the united states from other countries so that people can buy them as pets. this removes reptiles from their natural habitats in other parts of the world. unfortunately, many of these animals die within a year because they are not cared for correctly in captivity. many pet owners assume that reptiles are no-fuss, low-maintenance pets that largely fend for themselves in a home tank or aquarium, but this is not the case. raising reptiles requires preparation and precaution. disease is a major concern when keeping and touching pet reptiles. nearly all healthy reptiles carry bacteria that cause salmonella. these bacteria are a natural part of life for reptiles, but in humans the bacteria can cause diarrhea, vomiting, and fever. A salmonella infection can also lead to bigger health problems. the u.s. centers for disease control and prevention is part of the federal government. it estimates that about 4,000 people each year get salmonella sicknesses from reptiles and amphibians. owning a reptile as a pet might be fun for a while, but it also can cause problems. As a result, the humane society of the united states recommends that people not keep reptiles as pets. wild animals are best left in the wild where they belong, they say.
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Snakes flick out their tongues to smell the air. Special receptors on a snakes tongue catch particles of scent. This helps the snake find food, avoid enemies, and locate mates during courtship. Once a courting male and female identify each other with smell, they often use touch to continue the courtship. Some types of snakes twist their bodies together and lift themselves partway off the ground in a courtship dance. Others gently rub their bodies together before they mate.
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Courting box turtles will bite, shove, and circle each other prior to mating.
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Bird Courtship
Birds Are AnimAls that have feathers and beaks, and lay eggs with hard shells. Of all the different animal courtship rituals, bird courtship is perhaps the best studied. Birds are fairly easy to watch in the wild, and theyre interesting, too. Many birds use songs and colors during courtship. Songs are often used to attract the attention of potential mates and to communicate. The male nightingale is famous for singing night and day to attract a mate. Male birds also often display brightly colored feathers to attract the attention of females. The male peacock maintains the ultimate collection of colorful feathers. The feathers seem to serve no purpose except to make him attractive during courtship.
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The courtship dance of red-crowned cranes involves prancing, leaps, bows, and loud unison calls. The courting cranes also throw sticks and other objects into the air with their beaks and then stab at the objects as they fall back down.
shells. Both birds and reptiles share a common ancestor: the dinosaur. Birds are social animals. Their courtship rituals are filled with songs, cooperation, and long-term care for their young.
ducKs
Duck is a common name for many types of birds, all closely related to geese and swans. Ducks live, feed, and mate near fresh or salt water in many parts of the world. Male ducks are usually more colorful than females. Males use distinctive calls to attract
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mates during courtship. Because ducks are fairly easy to find and watch, much is known about duck courtship. The courtship of the common mallard is easy to study and observe. The mallard displays both of the common duck courtship tools: feather colors and distinctive calls. Male mallards have bright green feathers on their heads. They have gray and black body feathers. Female mallards have brown and black speckled feathers. Scientists suspect that these color differences help birds identify their own species and help make the males more attractive to females.
The more colorful male mallard ( left) looks very different than the (left) left female mallard.
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Male mallards often begin courtship with an attention-getting song and dance. A courting male will shake its head and tail, raise its breast and wing tips, and arch its neck. All the while, the male is singing, whistling, and grunting. In response, female mallards will call to tempt males into fighting with other males or females. They may be testing the males to see which is the strongest. The entire courtship display is common but brief, sometimes lasting only a few minutes. A male and female mallard will pair up and mate rather quickly, and may mate again with other partners during the mating season. Most types of ducks mate during warmer months when ponds are thawed and food is plentiful. Different types of ducks court one another at about the same time each year. Yet, each type of duck has its own colors, dances, and songs. Scientists suspect these differences help ducks mate with ducks of their own species. Eiders, shovelers, wigeons, and teals are other groups of ducks that use similar courtship tools.
penguins
Many birds live everywhere in the world except for the southernmost continent: Antarctica. There, penguins rule. Penguins spend about half their lives on land and half in the water. They cannot fly; they waddle and slide over land. In the water, penguins mainly swim to find food. Penguin courtship involves a lot of song and dance. Yet, unlike many birds, many penguins are thought to be monogamous. That means they court and mate with the same partner every year. The Emperor penguin is the largest and perhaps best-studied penguin. When it is time to reproduce, usually in March or April, Emperors leave the sea and travel more than 50 miles
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Adlie penguins stretch upward and thrust their beaks outward in a courtship display.
(90 km) over land to the same location. There, they all gather to court and mate. Courtship begins when a male Emperor penguin calls out to find the female he courted in years past. The male will stand
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in one place and call loudly for a few seconds. Then he will move to a new place and call again. He repeats this pattern until he finds his female or a new mating partner who returns his call. After the female eventually lays an egg, the male and female take turns caring for the eggand, once its hatched, the chicktogether until the young penguin can stand on the ice and care for itself. Other penguins, including the smaller Adlie penguins, have similar courtship rituals. Males and females identify each other from year to year with their calls, and males stretch out their necks and thrust out their beaks in courtship displays prior to mating. Scientists suspect many penguins are monogamous because their time to court and mate is limited by weather. Each year, there is only a short time when it is warm enough to successfully raise an egg. Penguins have no time to waste in finding or fighting over mates. Choosing the same mate each year is thought to be easier. That said, penguin partners do not always mate monogamously. Sometimes males and females cannot find each other fast enough to pair up; other times a partner will not return to mate at all, so the penguin finds a new partner to rear its young. King penguins, chinstrap penguins, rockhopper penguins, and African penguins are other common types of penguins with similar courtship tactics.
pheAsAnts
The pheasants are a group of chicken-like birds. Quails, grouse, turkeys, and partridges are some common types of pheasants. These birds are known for strong sexual dimorphism. Many male pheasants have brightly colored feathers or other
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SENDING SIGNALS
imagine trying to listen to someone in a loud, crowded room. the persons mouth moves. sounds come out. A message is being sent, but it cannot be understood. there is too much noise and distraction. many birds and other animals face this challenge when they sing to attract a mate. they are trying to send a signal, but it does not always get through as intended. songs from other animals and environmental factors affect how the signal is heard. some scientists focus on how animal signals are sent and heard by other animals. researchers record birdsongs during courtship and then study how fast the songs are, how often the bird sings, and in what direction the bird is singing, among other things. researchers also may study how those songs are heard. For example, sound travels differently in a summer forest (in which the trees have leaves) than in a winter forest (in which the leaves have dropped). in many cases, the loudest songs come from the largest animals. sending a loud signal can be critical to successful courtship.
decorations, including fancy tails, unlike most females. These decorations are important during courtship. During courtship, males do their best to show their health and strength by displaying their bright colors and decorations. Female pheasants are attracted to vibrant colors and elaborate feather displays. Peacocks are the classic example of sexual dimorphism in pheasants. Male peacocks have bright blue and green feathers. They can fan out these long feathers to attract the attention of
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females. Female peacocks, sometimes called peahens, also have feathers that fan out, but the feathers usually are duller and shorter than the males feathers. Scientists have found little use for male peacock feathers other than to attract attention. Males use their feathers primarily during courtship. Females seem to display their feathers as warning signals for their offspring and other females.
Male peacocks have fancier feathers in order to attract the attention of females. Even male white peacocks, like this one, have longer, brighter feathers than female counterparts.
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seABirds
Seabird is a non-scientific term that includes all birds that live at sea. Seabirds live near oceans, on islands, or fly from one place to another in the ocean. Although these birds belong to several different scientific groups, they have similar lifestyles. Their courtship rituals are also similar. Most seabirds court one another and raise offspring in groups called colonies. The largest colonies can include one million birds. Colonies are often found on protected, rocky islands or coastlines. Seabirds come to colonies only to mate and nest. These birds dont have many offspring in their lifetimes, but they put a lot of time and energy into caring for the offspring that they do have. The courtship rituals of the albatrosses are typical of many seabirds. Albatrosses live throughout the worlds oceans. Many are endangered. When albatrosses are ready to mate, they return to the colony in which they were born to find a partner. These birds are monogamous; they mate with the same bird every season. The courtship rituals vary between the different types of albatross. All courtship rituals include dancing and calling. The well-studied Laysan albatross of the North Pacific Ocean performs a series of 25 different poses while calling to its mate. The giant wandering albatross of the Southern Ocean also displays and calls to its mate during courtship. Gulls, terns, boobies, auks, and petrels are other common groups of seabirds that court in colonies.
songBirds
Songbirds are a group of birds with highly developed voices. They can produce many different song-like notes and tones. They use
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CUCKOO BIRDS
cuckoo birds are a large group of songbirds famous for their courtship calls. they also are known for their sneaky parenting techniques. the common cuckoo lives in europe and Asia. it has the distinctive cuck-oo call that is mimicked in cuckoo clocks. each species of cuckoo has its own distinctive call, but scientists are interested in studying cuckoos for another fascinating reason. once courtship is complete and the female cuckoo is ready to lay her eggs, she does not lay them in her own nest. instead, she lays them in the nest of another bird. After the eggs hatch, the unsuspecting mother feeds and cares for the cuckoo babies along with her own offspring. (continues)
During courtship, a male Diederik cuckoo will feed caterpillars to its mate.
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(continued) often, the cuckoo babies are much larger than the other baby birds. the cuckoos sometimes kick out the other babies in order to get more food. the female cuckoos behavior is called cuckolding. over time, female cuckoos eggs have evolved to look almost identical to the other eggs in the cuckolded nest. the nesting birds do not recognize the difference of the cuckoo eggs, and they raise the offspring as their own. the cuckoos get healthy offspring without having to do much work. such cuckolding behavior is well studied in cuckoos and other birds, but it also occurs in some species of sh and mammals.
their songs to mark territories, identify themselves, and attract mates. Many birds use calls during courtship, but these calls are often simple and repetitive. They are used to sound warning alarms or attract the attention of other birds. Songbirds songs are more complex. Female songbirds sometimes use males songs to help judge the health of the males. Male songbirds sing to compete with one another. Male nightingales, for example, are famous for their singing abilities. They sing day and night, belting out a series of whistles, shrills, and gurgles that are often pleasing to the human ear. Female nightingales choose mates with songs that interrupt less aggressive, quieter birds. The louder a males song is, the better his chance of finding a mate. Other songbirds use songs as their main tools during courtship as well. Yet, not all songs are pleasing to humans, and not all songbirds are small, delicate birds like the nightingales.
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The black-capped chickadee, seen here, has slower and lower-pitched calls after breeding season. It will also be larger and have more white on the edge of its wing.
Crows and ravens, for example, are considered songbirds. These large, black birds are believed to be very intelligent. They can mimic human voices and other animals, and are able to produce dozens of complex sounds. Scientists have learned that crows and ravens use songs to attract mates during courtship, but their sounds and courtship behaviors are still being studied. Chickadees, cuckoos, warblers, swallows, and sparrows are other examples of common songbirds that sing during courtship.
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woodpecKers
Woodpeckers are tree-loving birds. They get their name because they peck at dead trees and other surfaces. Woodpeckers usually peck in search of insects for food, or to communicate with other woodpeckers. During courtship, male woodpeckers often tap on trees to mark their territory and attract females. The red-bellied woodpecker is a common resident of the eastern United States. Males create a drumming sound when
The noisy drumming of the red-bellied woodpecker in the United States is typically the sound of these birds trying to nd a mate.
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courting females, who usually respond with a similar drumming sound if interested. The drumming takes place anywhere that makes good sound, including on trees, telephone poles, house gutters and sidings. This is fairly typical courting behavior for common woodpeckers in the United States. Other woodpeckers are more mysterious. Little is known of the courtship behavior of the large, rare, ivory-billed woodpecker of the southeastern United States. This woodpecker actually may be extinct. One was supposedly seen and videotaped in Arkansas in 2005, but none have been seen since. Scientists suspect that the courtship rituals of the ivory-billed woodpecker focused on close, physical contact, rather than on making sounds. But the facts will likely never be known.
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Mammal Courtship
mAmmAls include All AnimAls that have hair and produce milk to feed their babies. Housecats, killer whales, lions, and humans are all mammals. Some courtship rituals in mammals have been well studied. Others are still mostly a mystery. Mammals use physical combat and scent during courtship. Males often fight over females. Many male mammals have evolved special characteristics for fighting. Scientists also know that scent signals are important during mammal courtship. Female rhinoceroses give off a courtship scent; so do many female monkeys. Mammals may use dance, color, and sound during courtship as well. Mammals that live in water often use touch and sound.
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blue whale can weigh more than 350 pounds (160,000 kilograms); it is about as heavy as a Boeing 747 airplane. This makes it 53 million times heavier than the smallest bats and shrews. Mammals truly come in all sizes. Mammals are found on all continents, in all oceans, and on many islands. The courtship rituals of some hoofed mammals, marine mammals, predators, small mammals, and primates are described here.
hooFed mAmmAls
Hoofed mammals include horses, deer, llamas, pigs, goats, antelopes, and rhinoceroses, among others. Scientifically, all of these animals arent necessarily related. Still, they all share a similar foot structure: a foot with a hard, bone-like toe, or hoof.
A male and female moose nuzzle together in Anchorage, Alaska. The bigger the antlers, the stronger a male will look to a female.
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These mammals are known as ungulates. There are many rituals of ungulate courtship, and many involve physical combat and scent.
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Moose are the largest members of the deer family, and their courtship rituals are similar to other deer. Moose, like many ungulates, use both physical combat and scent during courtship. In
On average, an elephant stays with its mother for about 16 years. This African elephant mother stands over her one-dayold baby.
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the fall mating season, female moose court males by giving off a strong scent and calling with deep voices. Male moose sometimes rely on physical combat. Male moose begin growing antlers in early summer. By courtship season, males use these impressive antlers to show off their size and sometimes to fight other males. A male moose assesses the size of another male by looking at the antlers. In a male-male standoff, the moose with smaller antlers will usually back down before there is any physical contact. But sometimes the males may push each other around a bit. Head-to-head combat can cause the antlers to become entangled. If this happens, both moose usually die. At the end of the mating season, male moose shed their antlers. A different sort of ungulate, the rhinoceros, also uses scent and physical contact during courtship. When a female rhino is ready to mate, she gives off a scent in her urine and dung. Males use their horns or teeth to fight each other for access to the females. Once offspring are born, ungulate mothers care for them for about two years. During this time, the babies learn to find food, avoid danger, and fend for themselves. When a mother has another baby, her older offspring will become independent.
mArine mAmmAls
The marine mammals are a group of animals that spend their lives in or near the ocean. Polar bears, seals, manatees, otters, dolphins, and whales are marine mammals. Because marine mammals spend much of their time at sea, their courtship rules and rituals are not always well documented or well understood. Little is known about the courtship behaviors of many whales, such as blue whales and beaked whales. These animals
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are difficult to find and watch. By contrast, people often can see the courtship of other whales, such as the northern right whale, at the oceans surface. Many marine mammals use physical size and sound during courtship. Male elephant seals use physical size to compete for access to females. Once each year, elephant seals gather in one place to court and mate. The males arrive first. They use sound, body size, and the occasional fight to stake out territories. The largest males establish the largest territories. As a result, they court and mate with the most females. Other male marine mammals, including some types of dolphins and manatees, form large groups that pursue females during courtship. Perhaps the best-known marine mammal that uses sound during courtship is the humpback whale. Male humpback whales sing long, complex songs. Sometimes the songs last for 24 hours. Females can make sounds, but they do not sing. At first, scientists assumed that male humpbacks sang to attract females. However, singing males have been observed attracting the attention of other males, so courtship may not be the only purpose of the songs. Scientists suspect the songs may also be important for navigation, identification, and intimidation of other whales.
predAtors
Predators often eat other animals for food (small predators sometimes get eaten by larger predators, too). Predators are a diverse and widespread group of creatures. Predator mammals include weasels, wolves, elephant seals, bears, and cats. Some predators are social animals that live in large groups. Others are solitary creatures that pair up only during mating season. A predators courtship rituals are linked with its social nature.
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In social predator societies, large males often compete for females during courtship. In these cases, large male body size is often a big advantage. Lions live in groups known as prides. Usually, the largest, strongest male lion is the leader of the pride, and he has his choice of courting and mating with the females in his group. Lions court and mate only with other pride members. Yet, within a pride, a male will court many females, and a female will mate with many males. Part of the reason for this is that lions arent very successful at getting pregnant. Scientists estimate that lions must mate 3,000 times for every cub that survives more than one year. Lions mate often, so courtship is quick. Wolves are another example of predators that live in groups, but their courtship practices are different from those of lions. Wolves live as monogamous pairs. Once a male and female pair is established, it stays together for life. The pair usually produces many offspring. As a result, gray wolf courtship happens only when a wolf is seeking a mate for the first time, or when a wolfs mate has died and it needs to find a new one. Gray wolves live in groups called packs. Within the pack, there is one male leader and one female leader. These are the alpha wolves. They are the only two wolves in the pack that will mate and have babies. All the other pack members will help care for these babies. The alpha wolves are not always the largest ones. Some wolves choose to leave their birth packs and set out on their own. These wolves may form pairs and establish territories, eventually beginning a new pack together in which they are the leaders. Because solitary predators live by themselves, they need ways to find mates. Predators have excellent senses of hearing, eyesight, and smell. These senses, especially the sense of smell, come into play during courtship.
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Bears are solitary predators with sensitive noses. During courtship, the female attracts a male with chemical signals. Many solitary weasels, badgers, and skunks also use these chemical signals, which are called pheromones.
smAll mAmmAls
Rodents, rabbits, moles, and shrews are all classic examples of small mammals. Many of the classic, small prey animals live in groups in protected places, often underground.
A male gray wolf (left) greets a female gray wolf. If they become an left left) established pair, wolves couple together for life.
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Rodents are the largest scientific group of mammals. There are about 2,000 different species of rodents. Each species has slightly different courtship rules and rituals. The standard city rat lives in social groups with dominant male leaders. These male leaders court and mate with many different females. Beavers, on the other hand, live as monogamous pairs for life. Scientists dont know how beavers conduct their courtship, but an adult beaver rarely lives alone for long. For many small mammals, such as rabbits and porcupines, scent plays a key role in courtship. Rabbits smell out potential mates. Female porcupines court males using scent in their urine.
primAtes
Primates include lemurs, monkeys, and apes. Most primates live in social groups and are considered intelligent animals. As is true of many mammals, size and scent are the key tools used during primate courtship. Primates also have sexual dimorphism, which means the males are often larger than the females. In some cases, males can be twice as large as females. Males and females often urinate or leave a scent to court one another and show interest. Unlike many mammals, primates have good vision, so color is another tool used during courtship. Lemurs are good examples of primates that use scent during courtship. A male lemur will smell the urine of a female. If the male is interested, he then wafts his specially scented tail at the female. If she accepts the display, she may curl her tail to invite the male to mate. Lorises and marmosets also use scent signals during courtship. Baboons are monkeys that use color during courtship. The rear ends of female baboons swell and turn bright red when the females are ready to mate.
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Gorillas and orangutans, which are species of ape, are good examples of sexual dimorphism. Male gorillas, often called silverbacks, easily can be twice the size of females. Similarly, male orangutans can be twice the size of female orangutans. The larger males are often the most successful during courtship. Scientifically, humans are considered apes as well. But the courtship of humans has long been influenced by human culture.
mammal courtship
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where it lives in the world. Humans are the prime example of a mammal with courtship rituals that are heavily influenced by social rules and culture.
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How Courtship Research is Gathered
mAny hours oF reseArch and observation go into learning about the rituals of animal courtship. There are as many different ways to study animal courtship as there are animals to study. Some scientists study courtship in the laboratory, while others observe how animals act in nature. Many do both. Scientists who study animal courtship come from many different scientific areas. Some are trained as ecologists or biologists. Others are trained as zoologists or psychologists. Each of them has a desire to document and understand animal courtship behavior. What follows are profiles of several scientists who study animal courtship. They come from different places, work in different locations, and study different animalsbut they all are contributing to the scientific understanding of animal courtship today.
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Nearly all of her work is conducted in the laboratory, where she pairs up courting spiders to see what they do and why they do it. Redback spiders are interesting because the large, black female (about 0.5 inches long, or 1.3 centimeters long) eats the smaller male (only about 0.1 inches long, or 3 mm long) while the two spiders are mating. When one animal eats another during courtship or mating, it is called sexual cannibalism. Many
Researcher Maydianne Andrade studies a redback spider on its web in a web frame. The female spider created the web, on which she and the male will later mate and have meals.
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spiders and some insects, including the praying mantis, practice sexual cannibalism. Whats unusual about the redback spider is that the male appears to offer himself as a meal for the female. During mating, the male redback spider somersaults onto the females fangs. He is often being digested during mating. The female clearly benefits from this mating trick: She gets a mate as well as a meal. Andrade has discovered that the male benefits, too. Andrade keeps about 10,000 redback spiders in her laboratory. When she wants to learn about redback spider mating, she lets them mate and watches what happens. In one study, Andrade and her colleagues recorded spider mating with a special, zoom-lens camera. They also measured the males and females using a microscope. They kept track of how long each mating lasted and recorded whether the male was eaten. (Sometimes the female lets the male live.) They also measured the amount of sperm (the male reproductive cells that are inserted in the female during mating) that was left inside each female. The study found that when a male redback spider was eaten, he injected more sperm into the female. Other studies found that males that were eaten mated for twice as long as uneaten males and fathered twice as many offspring with that female. A chance to father a lot of offspring is the ultimate goal for the mating male. He gets to pass on his traits to the next generation of redback spiders. However, the male redback spider does more than get eaten. It can take many minutes for the female to eat the male. While she is eating, the male has time to insert a plug into the female redback spider. This keeps other males from injecting sperm. The plug increases the males chances of fathering more offspring. At the same time, Andrade and her graduate student, Jeff Stoltz, found that males are able to pinch off parts of their body
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while being eaten by females. Andrade suggests that this protects important parts of the body, such as the heart, so that the male can survive longer and inject more sperm. Andrade began her work in animal courtship studying biology at the University of Toronto, Mississauga, and Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. She is currently an associate professor in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology at the University of Toronto, Scarborough.
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there are no colleges with programs specically tailored to the study of animal courtship, but several schools have strong concentrations of experts in animal behavior. these schools are listed below.
college
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY Indiana University, Bloomington, IN Princeton University, Princeton, NJ State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY Texas A&M University, College Station, TX University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ University of California, Davis, Davis, CA University of California, Riverside, Riverside, CA University of Florida, Gainesville, FL University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, MN University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
departments
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Evolution, Ecology and Behavior Program Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department of Ecology and Evolution Faculty of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Section of Evolution and Ecology Department of Biology Department of Zoology Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology Section of Integrative Biology Botany, Zoology, Wildlife Ecology
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One group of fish that Macas Garcia studies is called the Goodeinae. These fish are about 2 to 10 inches long (5 cm to 25 cm long). They live in the fresh waters of central Mexico and come in dozens of different varieties. Male Goodeinae from several varieties have yellow stripes on their tail fins that look like food. Macas Garcia and other scientists say the yellow fin stripes originally evolved to look like wriggling worms, enticing females to approach for a meal. Yet, instead of a meal, the female would
Researcher Constantino Mac as Garcia works in his ofce at the Institute for Ecology of the National Autonomous, which is part of the University of Mexico in Mexico City. On his computer screen is a picture of a handmade traditional tile that depicts the yellow stripe on a male shs tail, which he says shows the local craftspeople have long recognized the unique stripe on some sh species.
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end up mating with the male. The yellow stripes acted like a courtship trap. To better understand female fish responses to the yellow stripes, Macas Garcia and his colleagues tested fish in the laboratory. The scientists presented each female with two males: one with a yellow tail stripe and one without. The female could see both males, but the males could not see each other. When they allowed the males to show only their tails, the scientists discovered that the females of some varieties no longer fall for the yellow-tail trap. Females of varieties where males have a bright yellow stripe do not attempt to bite the tails of the males in search of food, as was the case in varieties that have light yellow stripes or no stripes at all. Instead the females of bright-tailed varieties pay attention to the color in a different way. Macas Garcia and his colleagues concluded that the females are attracted to the males with the brightest yellow tails, perhaps because the tails are now signs of good male health. Not because they are looking for a meal. Only the healthiest males can afford to maintain the bright yellow tail stripe. They should therefore produce the healthiest offspring. The yellow tail stripe is no longer a trap for many varieties of Goodeinae, but it is still a tool used in courtship. Much of Macas Garcias work involves experimenting with fish behaviors in the laboratory. He has studied many different kinds of fish, including the Amarillo fish. He showed that in Amarillo fish, ornamentssuch as bright colors or large finsare costly to maintain because they can interfere with escaping from predators. Once Macas Garcia understands a behavior in the laboratory, he double-checks his observations by watching the fish in their natural environment. It is always necessary to go back to
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the field and test some of the possible consequences of what one sees in captivity, he explains. Macas Garcia is currently a researcher based at the National University of Mexicos Ecology Institute. In the future, Macas Garcia plans to study how the courtship rituals of introduced animals affect the courtship of native animals.
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A male ddler crab attempts to attract a female to his sandy burrow by waving his giant claw. Scientists have learned that there may be sexual conict among ddler crabs, in which some males force females into their burrows.
In a recent study on the Kino Bay crabs, Pope and student Brian Haney saw an unusual courtship behavior called male directing. In male directing, a male fiddler crab uses his giant claw to maneuver a female into his burrow so he can mate with her. Pope and Haney wanted to understand this behavior. They wondered: Are females allowing themselves to be directed by males that they prefer? Or are males overpowering females by force? To answer their questions, the scientists watched the directing behaviors of the male fiddler crabs for many hours. They caught and measured the successful and unsuccessful directing
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males. Pope and Haney found that the successful males were larger and heavier than the females that were directed. However, they did not find any evidence that successful males were any healthier than unsuccessful males. Pope says this is evidence that males overpower females during courtship. The large males are the strongest crabs on the beach, but not necessarily the healthiest. When male crabs use their body size to overpower a female and outcompete other males, says Pope, it is evidence of sexual conict. A sexual conflict occurs when males and females have different goals during courtship and mating. These situations are common in the animal world, but this is the first time sexual conflict has been found in fiddler crabs. Still, most of the time, female fiddler crabs choose their own mates. Pope began her career studying fiddler crabs while earning a doctoral degree in zoology at Duke University. This work was completed when Pope was an assistant professor at Trinity Universitys Department of Biology in San Antonio, Texas.
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Scientists have found that the brain of the tiny female tungara frog shown here on the tip of a pencil eraserresponds best to deeper, more complex male frog calls.
different kinds of calls: simple calls and complex calls. Ryan has been trying to figure out which calls females prefer and why. Each summer, Ryan and other researchers record the courtship calls of the tungara males in the wild. They also experiment to see how female frogs respond to recorded male frog calls. Over the years, these scientists have learned that the female tungara frogs prefer the deeper, more complex calls of male frogs. Deep calls help males attract females, but they also can attract predators: bats. A calling male tungara frog risks being eaten when it tries to court females. Generally speaking, says Ryan, the larger, healthier males can produce the deep calls. At first, it looked as if females used
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the calls to find the biggest males. This might be because they were trying to have large, healthy offspring. Ryan worked with neuroscientists (scientists that study the brain) to study the female preference for deep and complex calls. In the laboratory, the group discovered that the brains of female tungara frogs are most sensitive to deeper sounds. Female frogs are programmed to respond best to big frogs. This wiring probably evolved over many thousands of years. The females that were wired this way mated with large males, and had larger, healthier offspring that survived better. Eventually, the wiring for choosing large males spread throughout the entire species. Ryan began his work in science as a high school biology teacher, and then went on to study animal behavior at Rutgers University in Newark, New Jersey. Since his professional research career began, Ryan has published nearly 150 papers on his work with the tungara frogs of Panama. Ryan is currently an advisor to approximately eight graduate students and two undergraduates. He is professor of zoology at the University of Texas in Austin, Texas. Ryan works with the students to better understand different aspects of the life of the tungara frog. He helps students form and develop research ideas of their own. Each summer, Ryan takes field assistants to Panama to assist in the research. For more information on working on the project, visit Ryans website at http://www.sbs.utexas.edu/ryan.
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work involves studying birds in their natural environments, including songbirds and sage-grouse. The male sage-grouse uses multiple signals to attract the attention of females during courtship. He will strut around, inflating and deflating two yellow air sacs in his chest. He also makes a distinct puff-up, breathy sound. Scientists suspect that females prefer males that make the loudest sounds. To test this idea, they need to measure how loud a males signals sound to a female sage-grouse while she is darting around in a pack of males. To understand what the female sage-grouse sees and hears, Patricelli and her colleagues built a robotic, remote-controlled, stuffed female grouse that can run on rails around a courtship area. The robot can record the sights and sounds of the males. Using the remote control, Patricelli can respond to male sage-grouse and see what happens. Patricelli calls the robot her fembot. Patricelli plans to use the fembot to help her understand how a male sage-grouse directs his sounds to be heard by females. Just as a human can turn to direct the sound of his or her voice, a male sage-grouse can turn to direct the sound of his courtship puff. This may make him sound louder and more attractive to females. In one study in Montana, scientists discovered a male sagegrouse that successfully courted 169 females in one season. In the same group of birds, other males failed to successfully court even one female. Patricelli hopes the fembot will help her understand why one male makes successful sounds while others do not. In addition, the team hopes to understand why some populations of sage-grouse in the wilds of Wyoming are declining. Their work takes them into the field to study the courtship of these birds in nature. Patricelli and her colleagues suspect that noise pollution from nearby developments may be interfering with the female sage-grouses ability to hear males during
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Researcher Gail Patricelli of the University of California poses with the prototype of the robotic female sage-grouse, called a fembot.
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A male sage-grouse ( background) makes a courtship display while look(background ) ing at the robotic female sage-grouse.
courtship. Patricellis team hopes that the noise pollution research will help sage-grouse courtship and development to coexist in Wyoming. Noise, Patricelli points out, is possible to control. As a graduate student trained in animal behavior and ecology, Patricelli studied the courtship behaviors of satin bowerbirds at the University of Maryland, College Park. She is currently an ecologist at the University of California, Davis in the Section of Evolution and Ecology.
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Scientists have observed that female pygmy lorises prefer countermarking males.
during courtship. Fisher studied pygmy lorises living in captivity at a zoo. Both male and female pygmy lorises use urine to mark their home ranges and communicate. Male pygmy lorises urinate, or
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mark, near where a female travels. One male will mark with urine, and another male will countermark near the first mark. The two males use these scent marks to compete for the attention of the female pygmy loris. To understand countermarking, Fisher experimented with 19 captive lorises living behind the scenes at the San Diego Zoo when she was pursuing her masters degree at the University of California, San Diego. In one experiment, Fisher collected urine samples from males and exposed them to other males. She was testing to see when and where the males would countermark. She found that some males tended to be countermarkers, meaning that they would urinate over an existing scent. Other males tended to be countermarked. In other words, they were the ones that had their scent marks challenged by other males. Fisher then exposed individual female lorises to one male from each group. The females strongly preferred the countermarking malethe one that would urinate over an existing scent. From this research, Fisher suggests that females prefer males that are better able to compete and saturate an area with their scent marks. Today, Fisher is a researcher at Harvard Universitys Museum of Comparative Zoology. She continues to study animal courtship, and is currently working with deer mice to understand how sperm compete after mating is complete.
Glossary
Actinopterygians All fish with fins and bones Arachnid Animals with jointed body parts, a hard outer shell (exoskeleton), no wings and no antennae Arranged marriage A marriage that is planned by people other than the individuals in the couple Arthropod An animal with a segmented body and a hard outer shell (exoskeleton). Spiders, insects, crustaceans, centipedes and scorpions are all arthropods. Beetle A type of insect with two pairs of wings. A pair of hard wings in front protects a pair of soft flying wings that are folded underneath. Behavior The response of an organism to signals or individuals in its environment Bivalves Mollusks with two-part shells, such as clams and oysters cephalopod A type of mollusk. Many cephalopods have lost the mollusk shell, or it has become an internal shell. Octopuses, squids, cuttlefish and nautilus are all cephalopods. courtly love The combination of a physical and very emotional desire for another person courtship The process that results in two mature members of a species becoming a couple, usually with the intent to mate and produce offspring crustaceans Animals with hard outer shells, antennae, and three body parts. Crabs, lobster, and shrimp are crustaceans.
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glossary
10
cuckolding Passing off parenting duties to another animal, without that animal knowing it diversity A measure of how many different types of things exist echinoderms Animals with spiny or rigid outside skins. Sea stars and sea urchins are echinoderms. ectotherms Cold-blooded animals evolution Change over time in the type and frequency of physical traits and behaviors in a population of organisms gestation The amount of time that a female mammal carries young in her body before they are born hermaphrodite same time A living thing that is both male and female at the
intelligent design Contends that natural selection and evolution cannot be the only forces that shape life on Earth. The idea is that life is so clever that it must have an intelligent designer. introduced animals Animals that do not naturally live in an area, but have been moved there by humans, either on purpose or accidentally mating plug with a female monogamous season native animals natural history environments A barrier that prevents other males from mating Mating with the same partner each breeding Animals that naturally live in an area The study of plants and animals in their natural
natural selection The process by which favorable characteristics and behaviors become more common in a population over time, and unfavorable characteristics and behaviors become less common or disappear
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pectines Specialized organs on the underside of a scorpion that are used for touch pedipalps A male spiders special set of arm-like appendages that hold and dispense sperm into a female during mating physical characteristic An observable body part, such as a feather, fin, or antler, or a color or size salmonella A disease naturally carried by reptiles that is potentially dangerous to humans sexual cannibalism courtship or mating When one animal eats another during
sexual conict When males and females have different goals during courtship and mating sexual dimorphism When males and females of the same type of animal are different sizes or have different colors or body parts, such as antlers sexual selection The idea that behaviors or physical characteristics that increase an animals success during courtship and mating will spread through a population over time spawning The process of releasing eggs into the water to mix with sperm and grow into new animals temperature-dependent sex determination When the temperature of the eggs in a nest determines whether those eggs hatch as males or females ungulates Hoofed mammals
Bibliography
Adler, Jerry, Anne Underwood, and William Lee Adams. Charles Darwin: Evolution of a Scientist. Newsweek Vol. 146, Issue 22 (November 28, 2005). Bell, Michael A. and Susan Adlai Foster. The Evolutionary Biology of the Threespine Stickleback. Oxford University Press. (1994) 313-318. Berreby, David. Evolving by Accident, Not Fitness. New York Times. (October 14, 2003) University of Texas Web site. Available online. URL: http://www.sbs.utexas.edu/ryan/People.htm. Dawkins, Richard. The Illusion of Design. Natural History Magazine Web site. Available online. URL: http://www. naturalhistorymag.com/master.html?http://www.naturalhistory mag.com/1105/1105_feature1.html. Dean, Cornelia. In Lobster Courtship, Traits Like Humans. August 9, 2005. New York Times Web site. Available online. URL: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/09/science/09love.html. Fiore, Andrew T. Romantic Regressions: An Analysis of Behavior in Online Dating Systems. UC Berkeley Web site. Available online. URL: http://people.ischool.berkeley.edu/~atf/thesis_mit/. Fisher, Heidi S. and G. G. Rosenthal. Male swordtails court with an audience in mind. Biology Letters. (2007) 3: 5-7. Fisher, Heidi S., R.R. Swaisgood, and H. Fitch-Snyder. Countermarking by male pygmy lorises (Nycticebus pygmaeus): Do females use odor cues to select mates with high competitive ability? Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. (2003) 53: 123-130.
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Fisher, Helen E. The Biology of Attraction. Psychology Today Web site. Available online. URL: http://psychologytoday.com/ articles/index.php?term=pto-19930301-000030&print=1. Foote, C. J., G. S. Brown, and C.W. Hawryshyn. Female colour and male choice in sockeye salmon: implications for the phenotypic convergence of anadromous and nonanadromous morphs. Animal Behaviour. (2004) 67: 69-83. CAB Abstracts Web site. Available online. URL: http://www.cababstractsplus.org/google/ abstract.asp?AcNo=20043030640. Gordon, David George. The Complete Cockroach: A Comprehensive Guide to the Most Despised. Ten Speed Press. (1996) 65-69. Available online. URL: http://books.google. com/books?id=kk14saK7i5AC. Goudarzi, Sara. Birds Cut Rivals Off in Mating Songs. August 4, 2006. LiveScience Web site. Available online. URL: http://www. livescience.com/animals/060804_song_overlap.html. Hany, Brian and Denise Pope. Evidence of sexual conflict in the fiddler crab Uca princeps. Submitted to Proceedings of the Royal Society Biological Sciences. Obtained by personal communication with Pope. The Human Society of the United States. Live Reptile Trade. The Humane Society Web site. Available online. URL: http:// www.hsus.org/wildlife/issues_facing_wildlife/wildlife_trade/ live_reptile_trade/. Kendall, David. Scorpions. Kendall Bioresearch Services Web site. Available online. URL: http://www.kendall-bioresearch. co.uk/scorpion.htm. Lewis, Sara. Summer flings: firefly courtship, sex, and death. Natural History. July-August 2003. FindArticles.com Web site. Available online. URL: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_ m1134/is_6_112/ai_105371466. Losin, Neil. King of the Western Sage. Living Bird. (Summer 2007) 10-19.
Bibliography
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Macas Garcia, C. and E. Ramirez. Evidence that sensory traps can evolve into honest signals. Nature 434 (2005) 501-505. Madden, Mary and Amanda Lenhart. Online Dating. The Pew Internet & American Life Project Web Site. Available online. URL: http://www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/177/report_display.asp. Myers, P. Animal Diversity Web. University of Michigan Museum of Zoology. Available online. URL: http://animaldiversity. ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Animalia.html. Phillips, Kathryn. School Riddles; Schooling Fish. International Wildlife. National Wildlife Federation. Available online. URL: http://find articles.com/p/articles/mi_m1170/is_n2_v25/ai_16678894/print. Pycraft, W.P. The Courtship of Animals. Whitefish, Montana: Kessinger Publishing, 2007. ScienceDaily. Role Reversal: Male Gets Easy Ride In Insect Courtship. ScienceDaily Web site. Available online. URL: http://www. sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/07/030725080035.htm. Snow, LSE and Andrade, MCB. Pattern of sperm transfer in redback spiders: Implications for sperm competition and male sacrifice. Behavioral Ecology 15(5) (2004) 785-792. Available online. URL: http://www.utsc.utoronto.ca/~mandrade/pdf/Snow_ Andrade2004.pdf?ijkey=10yMMM0B4nWjM&keytype=ref. Stout, Prentice K. Fish Schooling Rhode Island Sea Grant Web site. Available online. URL: http://seagrant.gso.uri.edu/ factsheets/schooling.html. Sulloway, Frank J. The Evolution of Charles Darwin. Smithsonian Vol. 36, Issue 9 (December 2005): 58-69. Wilson, Edward O. The Diversity of Life. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1999. Zimmer, Carl. This Cant be Love. New York Times Web site. Available online. URL: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/ 09/05/science/05cann.html?_r=4&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref =slogin&oref=slogin.
Further Resources
Ackerman, Diane. The Rarest of the Rare. New York: Random House, 1995. Bradley, James V. How Species Change. New York: Chelsea House, 2006. Givens, David. Love Signals: A Practical Field Guide to the Body Language of Courtship. New York: St. Martins Press, 2004. Hare, Tony. Animal Life Cycles: Growing Up in the Wild. New York: Facts On File Natural Science Library, 2001. Hickman, Pamela. Animals and Their Mates: How Animals Attract, Fight for and Protect Each Other. Tonawanda, NY: Kids Can Press, 2004. Hoose, Phillip. The Race to Save the Lord God Bird. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2004. Johnson, Vargie. Charles Darwin, The Discoverer. Chattaroy, WA: Kiwe Publishing, 2006. Kirschner, Marc W. and John C. Gerhart. The Plausibility of Life: Resolving Darwins Dilemma. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2005. Sloan, Christopher, M. Leakey, and L. Leakey. The Human Story: Our Evolution from Prehistoric Ancestors to Today. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Childrens Books, 2004. Strauss, Rochelle. Tree of Life: The Incredible Biodiversity of Life on Earth. Tonawanda, NY: Kids Can Press, 2004. Walker, Sally. Crocodiles. Minneapolis: Learner Publications, 2004.
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Further Resources
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WEB SITES
BioKids University of Michigan
http://www.biokids.umich.edu/ Includes a Critter Catalog focused on the diversity of animals.
Understanding Evolution University of California Museum of Paleontology National Center for Science Education
http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/home.php The basics of evolution, including Darwins theory of natural selection, for young people.
Picture Credits
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9: Victorian Traditions/ Shutterstock 17: Library of Congress 23: Neale Cousland/ Shutterstock 25: Charlie Bishop/ Shutterstock 26: Leighton Photography & Imaging/Shutterstock 28: Robert Koss/Shutterstock 31: Nick Stubbs/Shutterstock 35: Brendan Howard/ Shutterstock 36: Acha Joaquin Gutierrez/ Photolibrary 41: Joze Maucec/Shutterstock 43: Blickwinkel/Alamy 46: Peter Arnold, Inc./ Alamy 47: Alexandru Axon/ Shutterstock 49: David Cheskin/Press Association /AP Images 51: Paul Vorwerk/ Shutterstock 54: Tom Salyer/Photolobrary 55: Javed Jafferji / Photolibrary 57: Clearviewstock/ Shutterstock 63: Roy Toft /Photolibrary 64: Susan Quinland-Stringer/ Shutterstock 66: Ben Osborne/ Photolibrary 69: Susan Flashman/ Shutterstock 71: Jan Erasmus/Shutterstock 73: John Czenke/ Shutterstock 74: Chas/Shutterstock 77: Danita Delimont/ Alamy 79: Four Oaks/Shutterstock 83: Kitch Bain/Shutterstock 84: Thomas Kitchin & Victoria Hurst/ Photolibrary 87: Julie Simpson/ Shutterstock 90: Ken Jones 94: Georgina Corts Soto 97: Michael Nichols/Getty Images 99: George Grall/Getty Images 102: Neil Losin 103: Neil Losin 104: James Balog/Getty Images
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Index
A
actinopterygians, 42 Adelie penguins, 66, 67 albatross, 70 alligators, 52, 5354, 56 alpha wolves, 82 Amarillo sh, 95 amphibians, 5253 Andrade, Maydianne, 8992 Animal Behavior Society (ABS), 9293 animal courtship, 78 behaviors of, 2629 research on, 89105 sexual selection and, 2229 tools of, 1618 animal signals, 68 anole lizards, 2526, 58 antelope, 10 antennae, 32 antlers, 80 ape, 86 arachnids, 3031, 3436, 3839, 8992. see also spiders arranged marriages, 15 arthropods, 30, 44
B
baboons, 85 bats, 76 bears, 84 beavers, 85 beetles, 3133 behaviors, 16, 2629 biology, of human courtship, 812 birds, 62 courtship, 6275 cuckoos, 7172 ducks, 6365 penguins, 6567 pheasants, 6769 population, 6263 reptiles and, 6263 research on courtship of, 100103 seabirds, 70 songbirds, 7073 songs by, 68, 7273 woodpeckers, 7475 bivalves, 42, 4950 black widow spiders, 32 body size, 2425 box turtles, 6061 butteries, 30, 3334
C
calls, 2829, 57, 63 64, 72 cats, 10 cephalopods, 42, 4649 chameleons, 10, 58 chemical signals, 34, 84 chickadees, 73 clams, 4950 cockroaches, 34, 35 codsh, 10 colors cuttlesh, 4748 ducks, 64 sh, 40, 43 lizards, 58 males, 2526 primates, 85 combat, 80 computerized courtship, 1314 countermarking, 105 courtly love, 15 courtship dance, 1112, 44 The Courtship of Animals (Pycraft), 13 courtship research, 89105
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ANIMAL COURTSHIP
dewlaps, 26, 58 dinner dates, 12 dinosaurs, 63 diversity of life, 22 dominant males, 86 ducks, 6365 dung beetles, 31, 3233 research on courtship of, 9296 schools, 45 Fisher, Heidi, 103 105 Fisher, Helen, 8, 10 Fitzroy, Robert, 19 irting, 810 food, 12 frigate birds, 2829 frogs, 10, 52, 5657, 98100
on birds, 100103 on sh, 9296 on mammals, 103105 on reptiles, 98100 on shellsh, 9698 on spiders, 8992 crab spiders, 32 crabs, 44, 46, 9698 creationism, 20, 21 crocodiles, 5254, 56 crows, 73 crustaceans, 42, 44, 46 cuckolding, 72 cuckoo birds, 7172 cultural factors, in courtship, 8, 1215 cuttlesh, 4647
E
early humans, courtship process of, 1314 echinoderms, 41, 42, 5051 ectotherms, 53 elephant seals, 2425, 81 elephants, 79 Emperor penguins, 6567 evolution, 15, 1921 eye contact, 1011
G
Galapagos Islands, 19 gestation, 78 Givens, David, 1112 golden orb spiders, 32 Goodeinae, 9495 gorillas, 86 groupers, 45
D
dancing, 1112, 44 Darwin, Charles, 1718 dilemma facing, 2022 research of, 1820 theory of natural selection, 18, 1920 theory of sexual selection, 2224 Darwin, Emma, 20 dating, 8, 12, 1314 Dawkins, Richard, 21 deer, 10
F
female offspring, 86 female spiders, 32, 37, 38, 9091 females, reproductive role of, 27 ddler crabs, 9698 reies, 30, 33 s h courtship, 40, 4244 population, 4142
H
Haney, Brian, 9798 hermaphrodites, 50 HMS Beagle voyages, 19, 20 hoofed mammals, 7780 horns, 32 human courtship, 78 biology of, 812 culture of, 8, 1215 evolution of, 15 online, 1314
Index
humpback whales, 81 hypothesis, 18 males secondary sex characteristics in, 27 specialized physical characteristics of, 2426 mallards, 6465 mammals courtship, 7688 diversity among, 8788 gestation period, 78 hoofed, 7780 marine, 8081 offspring, 78 population, 7677 predators, 8184 primates, 8586 research on courtship of, 103105 small, 8485 marine mammals, 8081 marking behavior, 104105 marriage, arranged, 15 mate selection, 11 mating calls, 2829, 57, 6364, 72 mating plugs, 3334 mechanisms, 19 men, irting by, 10 Middle Ages, 1415 monogamy, 65, 67, 82 moose, 77, 7980 moths, 3334 mussels, 4950
117
I
infrasound, 54 insects, 3031, 3839 beetles, 3133 butteries and moths, 3334 cockroaches, 34 instincts, 13 intelligent design, 21 introduced animals, 96
N
native animals, 96 natural history, 1618 natural selection, 1722 nautilus, 4849 nightingale, 62, 72
O
octopuses, 4647 offspring, 8, 27, 78, 86 online dating, 1314 orangutans, 86 The Origin of the Species (Darwin), 18, 19, 20, 21 oysters, 4041, 4950
K
King Arthur, 15
L
lemurs, 85 life, diversity of, 22 lions, 82, 83 lizards, 52, 53, 58 lobsters, 10, 40, 46 love, 12, 1415 love at rst sight, 11
M
Macas Garcia, Constantino, 9296 Madagascar hissing cockroaches, 34, 35 male offspring, 86 male spiders, 32, 3738, 9092
P
Patricelli, Gail, 100103 peacocks, 2324, 62, 6869 pectines, 35 pedipalps, 38 penguins, 6567 Perper, Timothy, 1112
118
ANIMAL COURTSHIP
sex determination in, 5556 species, 53 rhinoceros, 80 rodents, 8485 romance, 12 romantic love, 1415 Rosenthal, Gil, 92 Ryan, Michael J., 98100 sexual cannibalism, 9091 sexual conict, 98 sexual dimorphism, 37, 6769, 85, 86 sexual selection, 2229 Shakespeare, William, 7, 8 shellsh courtship, 4041 population, 4142 research on courtship of, 9698 shrews, 76 signals, animal, 68 Sir Lancelot, 15 small mammals, 8485 Smith, Arthur, 3738 snakes, 10, 52, 53, 58, 60 sociologists, 10 songbirds, 7073 songs, 29, 62, 68, 7273, 81 sound, 52, 5657, 72, 81 spawning, 4849 spiders, 30, 32, 3738, 8992 squids, 4647 squirrels, 11 stickleback sh, 4344 Stoltz, Jeff, 91
pets, reptiles as, 59 Pew Internet & American Life Project (PIALP), 14 pheasants, 6769 pheromones, 34, 84 physical characteristics, 16, 18, 2426 Pope, Denise, 9698 porcupines, 85 predators, 8184 prides, 82 primates, 8586 pufng behavior, 10 Pycraft, W.P., 13 pygmy lorises, 103 105
S
sage-grouses, 101103 salamanders, 52 salmon, 40, 4243, 48, 49 salmonella, 59 sardines, 45 scallops, 4950 scents, 60, 80, 82, 85 scorpions, 3436 sea cucumbers, 5051 sea stars, 4849, 50 sea turtles, 55, 60 sea urchins, 4041, 50 seabirds, 70 seals, 81 secondary sex characteristics, 26, 27 senses, 61 sex determination, temperaturedependent, 5556
Q
Queen Guinevere, 15
R
rabbits, 85 rats, 85 ravens, 73 redback spiders, 32, 37, 8992 reproduction, 27 reptiles, 52 birds and, 6263 as pets, 59 research on courtship of, 98100
Index
survival of the ttest, 1920 tungara frogs, 57, 98100 turtles, 52, 6061 The Two Gentlemen of Verona (Shakespeare), 7
119
W
water bugs, 32 whales, 8081 Wilson, Edward O., 22 wolves, 82, 84 women, irting by, 10 woodpeckers, 7475
T
temperaturedependent sex determination, 5556 theory, 18 toads, 10, 5657 tortoises, 6061 touch, 52 traits, 1820, 24
U
ungulates, 7780
V
vertebrate, 41 vocalizations, 5657
Z
zebra mussels, 48 Zeus water bugs, 32
120