2016
DOI: 10.1163/1568539x-00003374
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Flexible timing of reproductive effort as an alternative mating tactic in black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix) males

Abstract: Lyrurus tetrix lek behaviours, we tested whether there were fine-scale differences in 21 reproductive effort (lek attendance, fighting rates) and whether these were related to age

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Cited by 5 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Males can adjust their reproductive investment even more dynamically, not only across but within a breeding season, in response to any number of short-or long-term factors [e.g. number of competitors (Shine et al, 2003;Nieminen et al, 2016) or age and condition (Mysterud et al, 2008)]. Such flexibility and a greater diversity of potential mating strategies is probably one reason why the study of capital-income breeding in males has been generally neglected, despite such a concept being equally applicable to males and females.…”
Section: Capital and Income Breeding In Malesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Males can adjust their reproductive investment even more dynamically, not only across but within a breeding season, in response to any number of short-or long-term factors [e.g. number of competitors (Shine et al, 2003;Nieminen et al, 2016) or age and condition (Mysterud et al, 2008)]. Such flexibility and a greater diversity of potential mating strategies is probably one reason why the study of capital-income breeding in males has been generally neglected, despite such a concept being equally applicable to males and females.…”
Section: Capital and Income Breeding In Malesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Male black grouse are under strong sexual selection, with females using multiple condition-dependent ornaments (tail (lyre) length, blue structural colouration of feathers, red eye comb size) and behaviours (fighting, lek attendance, distance from lek centre) to select males (Alatalo et al 1991 ; Hovi et al 1994 ; Höglund et al 1997 ; Rintamäki et al 2001 ; Hämäläinen et al 2012 ; Kervinen et al 2016 ). Lekking is energetically demanding (Vehrencamp et al 1989 ), with males losing considerable body mass during the breeding season (Lebigre et al 2013 ) through their investment in lekking activity (Nieminen et al 2016 ). Hence, it might be predicted that the energetic demands of a too-high immune response are costly for males, whereas a too-low response may make males vulnerable to parasites, also diminishing male performance.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some individuals may start switching to self-maintenance behaviors, reducing overall investment in intra-sexual competition towards the end of the rut (Pitcher et al, 2014; Vannoni & McElligott, 2009; Wyman et al, 2021). By contrast, lower-ranked males are involved in more than one fight less often during the rut, and some of them may increase their effort later in the mating season (Mason et al, 2012; Nieminen et al, 2016). This suggests that lower-ranked males successfully use alternative mating tactics in scenarios when fewer higher-ranked males are preoccupied in further disputing dominance relationships.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%