检索结果(检索关键词为:EVOLUTION;结果共33条)
  • Fuss, Theodora; Witte, Klaudia
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2019年第65卷第3期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoz030
    关键词: SEXUAL SELECTION; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; LEARNING-ABILITY; MATING SUCCESS; RELATIVE BRAIN; PERFORMANCE; DISCRIMINATION; FLEXIBILITY; EVOLUTION; BEHAVIOR
    摘要:

  • Possenti, Cristina Daniela; Bentz, Alexandra Bea; Romano, Andrea; Parolini, Marco; Caprioli, Manuela; Rubolini, Diego; Navara, Kristen; Saino, Nicola
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2019年第65卷第4期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoy064
    关键词: INCREASED NEST PREDATION; CLUTCH-SIZE; MATERNAL TESTOSTERONE; EVOLUTION; YOLK; BIRDS; GROWTH; COLONIALITY; SELECTION; HABITAT
    摘要: Predators have both direct, consumptive effects on their prey and non-lethal effects on physiology and behavior, including reproductive decisions, with cascading effects on prey ecology and evolution. Here, we experimentally tested such non-lethal effects of exposure to increased predation risk on clutch size, egg mass, and the concentration of yolk steroid hormones in the yellow-legged gull Larus michahellis. We simulated increased predation risk by displaying stuffed predators (adult fox Vulpes vulpes, and adult buzzard Buteo buteo) to breeding adults before egg laying. The concentration of corticosterone, which has been shown to increase under exposure to maternal predation risk in other species, and of testosterone did not differ between eggs from mothers exposed to the predators and eggs from control mothers (i.e., eggs exposed to a novel object of similar size and position to the stuffed predators). The concentration of the two hormones negatively covaried. Clutch size did not vary according to experimental treatment, whereas egg mass was markedly larger in clutches from nests exposed to predators than in clutches from control nests. By increasing egg mass, mothers may reduce the risk of cooling of the eggs when incubation is impeded by predators, boost energy reserves, reduce post-natal detectability caused by food solicitation, and/or enhance development at hatching, thus increasing the chances of offspring survival. In general, our results are inconsistent with most of the few previous studies on similar non-lethal predator effects and suggest that such effects may vary among species according to ecological conditions, social behavior, and developmental mode.

  • Ravignani, Andrea
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2019年第65卷第1期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoy087
    关键词: BONOBOS PAN-PANISCUS; VOCAL TURN-TAKING; SONG SYSTEM; EVOLUTION; FEMALE; REPERTOIRE; BEAT
    摘要:

  • Backwell, Patricia Ruth Yvonne
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2019年第65卷第1期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoy053
    关键词: FEMALE PREFERENCE; BUSH-CRICKET; MATING SUCCESS; MATE CHOICE; COURTSHIP; MECHANISMS; EVOLUTION; CONSTRAINTS; ALTERNATION; CHORUSES
    摘要: Many animals that use acoustic communication synchronize their mate attraction signals: individuals precisely time their calls to overlap those of their neighbors. In contrast, synchrony in the mate attraction displays of species with visual/motion-based signals is rare. It has only been documented in five species of fiddler crabs. In all of them, small groups of males wave their single large claw in close synchrony. Here, I review what we know about synchrony in fiddler crabs, comparing the five species with each other to determine whether similar mechanisms and functions are common to all. I also propose future research questions that, if answered, would shed light on synchronous behavior in both visual and acoustic signallers.

  • Fouks, Bertrand; Robb, Emily G.; Lattorff, H. Michael G.
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2019年第65卷第4期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoy099
    关键词: PARASITE ADAPTATION; SCENT MARKS; ECOLOGY; BEES; EVOLUTION; RESPONSES
    摘要: Pollinators use multiple cues whilst foraging including direct cues from flowers and indirect cues from other pollinators. The use of indirect social cues is common in social insects, such as honeybees and bumblebees, where a social environment facilitates the ability to use such cues. Bumblebees use cues to forage on flowers according to previous foraging experiences. Flowers are an essential food source for pollinators but also pose a high risk of parasite infection through the shared use of flowers leading to parasite spillover. Nevertheless, bumblebees have evolved behavioral defense mechanisms to limit parasite infection by avoiding contaminated flowers. Mechanisms underlying the avoidance of contaminated flowers by bumblebees are poorly understood. Bumblebees were recorded having the choice to forage on non-contaminated flowers and flowers contaminated by a trypan osome gut parasite, Crithidia bombi. The use of different treatments with presence or absence of conspecifics on both contaminated and non-contaminated flowers allowed to investigate the role of social visual cues on their pathogen avoidance behavior. Bumblebees are expected to use social visual cues to avoid contaminated flowers. Our study reveals that the presence of a conspecific on flowers either contaminated or not does not help bumblebee foragers avoiding contaminated flowers. Nevertheless, bumblebees whereas gaining experience tend to avoid their conspecific when placed on contaminated flower and copy it when on the non-contaminated flower. Our experiment suggests a detrimental impact of floral scent on disease avoidance behavior.