Sex-Specific Audience Effect in the Context of Mate Choice in Zebra Finches

PLoS One. 2016 Feb 3;11(2):e0147130. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147130. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Animals observing conspecifics during mate choice can gain additional information about potential mates. However, the presence of an observer, if detected by the observed individuals, can influence the nature of the behavior of the observed individuals, called audience effect. In zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata castanotis), domesticated males show an audience effect during mate choice. However, whether male and female descendants of the wild form show an audience effect during mate choice is unknown. Therefore, we conducted an experiment where male and female focal birds could choose between two distinctive phenotypes of the opposite sex, an artificially adorned stimulus bird with a red feather on the forehead and an unadorned stimulus bird, two times consecutively, once without an audience and once with an audience bird (same sex as test bird). Males showed an audience effect when an audience male was present and spent more time with adorned and less time with unadorned females compared to when there was no audience present. The change in time spent with the respective stimulus females was positively correlated with the time that the audience male spent in front of its cage close to the focal male. Females showed no change in mate choice when an audience female was present, but their motivation to associate with both stimulus males decreased. In a control for mate-choice consistency there was no audience in either test. Here, both focal females and focal males chose consistently without a change in choosing motivation. Our results showed that there is an audience effect on mate choice in zebra finches and that the response to a same-sex audience was sex-specific.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Choice Behavior / physiology*
  • Courtship
  • Female
  • Finches / physiology*
  • Male
  • Mating Preference, Animal / physiology*
  • Observation

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the "Hochschulinterne Forschungsförderung (HIFF)" of the University of Siegen. NK was supported by a Ph.D. scholarship of the University of Siegen. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.