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. 2015 Dec 1;61(6):1073–1081. doi: 10.1093/czoolo/61.6.1073

Mate-choice copying: Status quo and where to go

Klaudia Witte 1,*, Nina Kniel 1, Ilka Maria Kureck 1
PMCID: PMC7098685  PMID: 32256543

Abstract

Mate-choice copying is a fascinating and widespread mate-choice strategy. Individuals gather public information about potential mates by observing others during sexual interactions and choose or reject the same individual as a mate as the observed individual did before. The influence of copying behavior on an individual’s mate choice can be so strong that socially acquired information can override genetically based preferences for certain phenotypes. Thus, mate-choice copying enforces dynamic processes in sexual selection. Here, we review the current state of research on mate-choice copying and focus on sex-specific aspects. We present evidence that mate-choice copying can support the evolution of novel sexual ornaments, and we discuss potential costs of mate-choice copying when public information is not reliable. Moreover, we discuss the conflict faced by males that copy since mate-choice copying increases sperm competition. In conclusion we suggest interesting topics for future research in mate-choice copying.

Keywords: Mate-choice copying, Public information, Audience effect, Sperm competition, Novel ornaments


Articles from Current Zoology are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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