2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2017.04.007
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Different or alike? Female rainbow kribs choose males of similar consistency and dissimilar level of boldness

Abstract: to different conditions. However, sheer costs of flexibility cannot explain the polymorphism 22 created by personality variation. In a correlative approach, we here tested whether mate 23 choice might act as a major driving force maintaining personality variation in the 24 monogamous, biparental rainbow krib, Pelvicachromis pulcher. We personality-typed all 25 males and females for their boldness (activity under simulated predation risk) and allowed 26 females to choose between two males that differed in their… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…For example, female guppies prefer to mate with bolder males (e.g. Godin and Dugatkin 1996), but female rainbow kribs (Pelvicachromis pulcher) preferentially mate with males who display a dissimilar level of boldness to themselves (Scherer et al 2017), and pairs of great tits (Parus major) that mated assortatively at either extreme of the boldness spectrum had the greatest reproductive success (Both et al 2005). A meta-analysis by Smith and Blumstein (2008) on multiple taxa, including fishes, found a significant positive correlation between boldness and reproductive success in captive animals.…”
Section: (F) Personalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For example, female guppies prefer to mate with bolder males (e.g. Godin and Dugatkin 1996), but female rainbow kribs (Pelvicachromis pulcher) preferentially mate with males who display a dissimilar level of boldness to themselves (Scherer et al 2017), and pairs of great tits (Parus major) that mated assortatively at either extreme of the boldness spectrum had the greatest reproductive success (Both et al 2005). A meta-analysis by Smith and Blumstein (2008) on multiple taxa, including fishes, found a significant positive correlation between boldness and reproductive success in captive animals.…”
Section: (F) Personalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sneddon 2003;Wilson and Stevens 2005;Adriaenssens and Johnsson 2010) that are heritable (Vilhunen et al 2008;Kortet et al 2014) and evidence that personality can affect mate choice (e.g. Godin and Dugatkin 1996;Both et al 2005;David and Cézilly 2011;Scherer et al 2017).…”
Section: (F) Personalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Overall then, while mate choice based on directional preferences (Godin & Dugatkin 1996; Kortet, Niemelä, Vainikka & Laakso 2012; Reaney & Backwell) and assortative mate choice (Ariyomo & Watt, 2013; Both, Dingemanse, Drent & Tinbergen, 2005; Kralj-Fišer, Sanguino Mostajo, Preik, Pekár & Schneider, 2013; Scherer, Kuhnhardt & Schuett, 2017) seem to be mutually exclusive mechanisms, our results suggest that the existence of a directional preference does not preclude effects of choosing individuals’ personality on individual variation in mating preferences.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…Animal personality represents a major component of intraspecific phenotypic variation (Wolf & Weissing, 2012), but whether and how sexual selection (e.g., through mate choice) affects personality distributions remains understudied (Schuett, Tregenza & Dall, 2010). Using the livebearing fish Poecilia mexicana , we investigated whether a directional mating preference for risk-taking mating partners provides those individuals with a reproductive advantage (Godin & Dugatkin, 1996; Kortet, Niemelä, Vainikka & Laakso, 2019) and/or if the strength of preference for risk-taking individuals would be dependent on the choosing individuals’ own tendency to take risks (assortative mate choice; Scherer, Kuhnhardt & Schuett, 2017). We found a pattern in which both preference functions appear to interact: female (but not male) P. mexicana generally preferred risk-taking over risk-averse mating partners, but the strength of preference (SOP) for risk-taking males was dependent on the choosing females’ own personality type (i.e.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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