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University of Georgia 11-Apr-00 What Females Really
Look for in a Mate
Description: Two researchers at the Savannah River Ecology
Laboratory have used a computer model to look at the question of what
females really look for in a mate (Evolutionary Ecology Research).
Mate selection and age: what females really want
Two researchers at the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory
have used a computer model to look at the question of what females really
look for in a mate. (Sorry, guys, this doesn't concern humans, only
those species where the male is a simple sperm donor.) Christopher Beck
and Larkin Powell published their findings in the journal, Evolutionary
Ecology Research.
Traditional wisdom and some past research holds that
females will select older males because their viability indicates better
genetic material for their offspring. The SREL researchers used previous
models but varied them in several fundamental ways. In the SREL model
half the females were specified as "choosy," that is exhibiting a preference,
while the other half were "non-choosy," or mated at random. Simulations
were run in which individual females were assigned as either choosy
or non-choosy and males were assigned an age. Simulations followed 1000
generations or until choosiness was either fixed or lost in the population.
What the researchers found was that in their model,
female preference for older males was unlikely to become fixed in the
population in most cases. Female mate choice based on male age was most
likely to become fixed in the population when choosy females exhibited
preferences for younger and intermediate age males. So, in species in
which males contribute only sperm, female preference based on male age
is more likely to evolve in a population if preferences are directed
towards younger and intermediate age males. As preferences for older
males were rarely selected over random mating, older males may not be
better mates.
Another conclusion drawn by the researchers is that
when older males are chosen, it may be on the basis of something other
than just good genes. In some cases older males may simply be more available.
The costs of mating are also taken into account by females. For instance,
female guppies are less choosy when predators are present. However,
in some species females remain choosy under various circumstances.
The conclusion is that female preference for older males
may evolve as a result of good genes in some cases, but not in others
or " sometimes the old guy wins, and sometimes he doesn't."
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