Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Defense Against Outside Competition is Linked to Cooperation in Male-Male Partnerships

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY(2020)

Cited 8|Views11
No score
Abstract
Male-male competition is a well-known driver of reproductive success and sexually selected traits in many species. However, in some species, males work together to court females or defend territories against male competitors. Dominant (nesting) males sire most offspring, but subordinate (satellite) males are better able to obtain fertilizations relative to unpartnered males. Because satellites only gain reproductive success by sneaking, there has been much interest in identifying the mechanisms enforcing satellite cooperation (defense) and reducing satellite sneaking. One such potential mechanism is outside competition: unpartnered satellites can destabilize established male partnerships and may force partnered satellites to restrain from cheating to prevent the dominant male from replacing them with an unpartnered satellite. Here, we manipulated perceived competition in the Mediterranean fish Symphodus ocellatus by presenting an "intruding" satellite male to established nesting and satellite male pairs. Focal satellite aggression to the intruder was higher when focal satellites were less cooperative, suggesting that satellites increase aggression to outside competitors when their social position is less stable. In contrast, nesting male aggression to the intruder satellite increased as spawning activity increased, suggesting that nesting males increase their defense toward outside competitors when their current relationship is productive. We found no evidence of altered spawning activity or nesting/satellite male interactions before and after the presentation. These results collectively suggest that response to outside competition is directly linked to behavioral dynamics between unrelated male partners and may be linked to conflict and cooperation in ways that are similar to group-living species. Lay Summary: Response to outside competitors is directly linked to spawning success and cooperation in established male reproductive coalitions. In a Mediterranean wrasse Symphodus ocellatus, we presented male partnerships with an unfamiliar competitor to induce perceived opportunities for partner choice. Dominants at successfully spawning nests and subordinates in less cooperative partnerships were more aggressive to intruders. These results demonstrate that the existing quality of current partnerships influences response to outside competition, but that this response is status-dependent.
More
Translated text
Key words
alternative reproductive tactics,biological market theory,cooperation,outside options,satellite male,sneak
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined