| Literature DB >> 28564380 |
Myron Charles Baker1, Ann Eileen Miller Baker1.
Abstract
The plumage characteristics of male Indigo and Lazuli Buntings are distinct, but the two species can learn each other's songs. Populations comprising Indigo, Lazuli and hybrid individuals occur in the Great Plains of North America, and assortative mating has been inferred from morphometric data. We devised a laboratory assay for determining female preferences for visual and vocal characteristics of conspecific and heterospecific males and for mixtures of these characteristics, such as might be encountered in an overlap population. Females of both species gave more copulation-solicitation displays when exposed to conspecific plumage and vocalizations than when exposed to heterospecific plumage and vocalizations. Females gave intermediate and similar responses to the combinations of conspecific plumage with heterospecific vocalizations and heterospecific plumage with conspecific vocalizations. Thus, in the absence of other potentially important variables, female reproductive behavior is consistent with the hypothesis of assortative mating, based upon both vocal and visual traits of the males and caused by female choice in this semispecies pair. © 1990 The Society for the Study of Evolution.Entities:
Year: 1990 PMID: 28564380 DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1990.tb05202.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694