Lecture 2 (Mate Choice 1) - Slides Flashcards
2 Ways to get a sexually selected trait
1) Vanquishing same-sex rivals (intrasexual selection)
2) Being chosen by the opposite sex (intersexual selection)
- May not operate indendently, mate may be more likely to be subject to intersexual selection after an intrasexual competition
- Example: Male deer and antlers are both for competition and are selected by females (Large antlers = better health and fewer parasites, and if they can use them in competitions = strength)
Sexual Selection
- Differential access to mates (more important) or gametes
- Natural selection operates independently (differently) for the sexes
- Sexual selection may not aid survival, and may impeded it. But it does aid reproduction.
Handicap Principle
What is the cost balance called and explain
- Only those individuals in good condition can afford to grow or develop larger more elaborate versions of these traits (does not have to be physical, can be psychological as well.
- Fitness trade-off occurs because it’s expensive to develop these signals which could be used for survival
- Everything has a trade-off
- Example: Heightened growth to be bigger and stronger faster heightens aging
Sexual Dimorphism in size
(What is the name for increased intrasexual competition among males, why is there variation in size at all, why not all big?)
- Polygyny: Increased intrasexual competition among males
- Males are 1.06 times larger than females in humans on average
- Why variation? Bigger individuals die earlier - important for grandparenting, and females may mate for resources and other reasons, not just height, but tall males usually have more resources.
- Also depends on female height.
- Monogamous species have similar size/shape/colour between sexes
- The more promiscuous the sexual behaviour, the more dimorphism (Usually male is bigger than female in mammals)
- Size is as good of a threat as ACTUALLY fighting and if competition increases, size becomes more important (Height is an ornament and a weapon)
- Exaggerated ornaments and weapons can occur as part of sexual dimorphism if competition increases
Salska (2008)
- What is your ideal partner height for a romantic relationship
- Women prefer taller males, males are more flexible but perfer shorter
- Preference for height depends on your height as well and average height of men in your potential mate pool
- Indirect benefit of height: Height in males is heritable and will increase likelihood offspring will be more rep
Male tallness benefits and cost
- Intimidate rivals, win physical competitions, provide resources and may cue status
- Cost: Senescence, difficult to achieve
Sex Differences in Reproductive rate
- Women are constained by pregnancy, gestation, and lactation, limited conception risk (can only get pregnant at certain times)
- Men is limited only by the access they have to mate (and puberty), but have higher variance/death rate due to competition.
- On average most have 2-3 children, in natural fertile non-industrial cultures it’s higher
Bateman’s Principle
- The sex with more variance in reproductive success will compete for access to the sex with less variance in reproductive success
- In humans, females are not able to reproduce as often as males for many reasons and therefore are more selective and males will be more competitive - the OSR is skewed to males
- Results in some males mating with multiple females, and some males not at all.
Operational Sex Ratio
- Ratio of sexually mature males to sexually mature females that are available to mate.
- Sex ratio = regardless of sexually mature available to mate (107-100 males-females in humans)
- Influenced by differences in: Reproductive rate, sexual maturation, mortality
- Causes men to compete more (not enough women to go around) and females to be choosy about mates (to have higher standards)
Examples of OSR
Natural effects and cultural events
- Young male syndrome: more male offspring born, but they die more usually do to more risky behaviours (still will have a male skew in OSR)
- Single Child Law in China
Triver’s Parental Investment Theory
- The sex that invests less in offspring will compete for the sex that invests more.
- The sex that invests more in offspring will be more discriminative in selecting mates than will the sex that invests less
- Not all women release an egg in an ovulatory cycle and there is variation in egg quality
Factor’s Influencing Parental Investment
1) Anisogamy: - Differences in gametes (Sperm are smaller and produced in huge quantities (12mil/hour), Ova are larger and 400/lifetime)
2) Gestation: Huge maternal investment and women prefer/mated with men who gave them more resources. Lactation further suppresses fertility
3) Post-natal care: women tended to be in contact with infants more than fathers
The Coolidge Effect
- Males exhibit renewed sexual interest if introduced to new receptive sexual partners even after refusing sex from prior but still available sexual partner
- Males produce more sperm in their ejaculate to a new partner
- Women going on dates are more preoccupied with looking different, may be related to this.
- Men are more likely than women to benefit from additional mate opportunities
Desire for number of mates
Bride wealth
- Male reproductive success benefits from increase in wives
- Payment made by a groom or his kin to ratify a marriage
- In some cultures the dowry is about the same as ring
- Men want sex with a new partner earlier than women, want more partners over 30 years and consent to sex earlier.
- Africa is very low, likely due AIDS and sex education
- Bride wealth positively correlates to how early female was circumcised (when she hit puberty. Earlier puberty = more fertile)
Clark and Hatfield 1989
- Asked attractive confederates to ask out strangers.
- Men and women will equally go on a date, but apartment/sex option was way more men, and men apologized when they did say no