Models of sexual selection predict that females use ornament size to evaluate male condition. It has also been suggested that ornament asymmetry provides females with accurate information about condition. To test these ideas we experimentally manipulated condition in the stalk-eyed £y, Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni, by varying the amount of food available to developing larvae. Males of this species have greatly exaggerated eyestalk length and females prefer to mate with males with wider eyespans. Our experiments show that male ornaments (eyestalks) display a disproportionate sensitivity to condition compared with the homologous character in females, and to non-sexual traits (wing dimensions). In contrast, in neither sex did asymmetry re£ect condition either in sexual ornaments or in non-sexual traits. We conclude that ornament size is likely to play a far greater role in sexual selection as an indicator of individual condition than does asymmetry.
The effect of transient nutritional stress (sucrose culture medium) on female mate preference was investigated in the stalk-eyed fly Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni. Two experimental treatments were run in parallel. In the first, female preference was initially tested on corn (standard medium) and subsequently on sucrose (novel medium). In the second, female preference was tested in the reverse order: sucrose then corn. Females fed on corn had stronger preferences for large-eyespan males than females fed on sucrose. Female age, experience or the order of exposure to culture media had no effects on the strength of preference. An additional experiment demonstrated that the sucrose diet reduced the number of developing and mature eggs. We discuss the adaptive significance of changes in female preference due to transient nutritional stress, and the effect of changes in female preference on the strength of sexual selection.
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