Multimodal communication in courting fiddler crabs reveals male performance capacities

Courting males often perform different behavioural displays that demonstrate aspects of their quality. Male fiddler crabs, Uca sp., are well known for their repetitive claw-waving display during courtship. However, in some species, males produce an additional signal by rapidly stridulating their cla...

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Main Authors: Sophie L. Mowles, Michael Jennions, Patricia R. Y. Backwell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.161093
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spelling doaj-c956572009c84ab8b08de9a82c96f4ce2020-11-25T04:05:19ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-014310.1098/rsos.161093161093Multimodal communication in courting fiddler crabs reveals male performance capacitiesSophie L. MowlesMichael JennionsPatricia R. Y. BackwellCourting males often perform different behavioural displays that demonstrate aspects of their quality. Male fiddler crabs, Uca sp., are well known for their repetitive claw-waving display during courtship. However, in some species, males produce an additional signal by rapidly stridulating their claw, creating a ‘drumming’ vibrational signal through the substrate as a female approaches, and even continue to drum once inside their burrow. Here, we show that the switch from waving to drumming might provide additional information to the female about the quality of a male, and the properties of his burrow (multiple message hypothesis). Across males there was, however, a strong positive relationship between aspects of their waving and drumming displays, suggesting that drumming adheres to some predictions of the redundant signal hypothesis for multimodal signalling. In field experiments, we show that recent courtship is associated with a significant reduction in male sprint speed, which is commensurate with an oxygen debt. Even so, males that wave and drum more vigorously than their counterparts have a higher sprint speed. Drumming appears to be an energetically costly multimodal display of quality that females should attend to when making their mate choice decisions.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.161093biotremologycourtshipfiddler crabmultimodal signalstaminavibrational signal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophie L. Mowles
Michael Jennions
Patricia R. Y. Backwell
spellingShingle Sophie L. Mowles
Michael Jennions
Patricia R. Y. Backwell
Multimodal communication in courting fiddler crabs reveals male performance capacities
Royal Society Open Science
biotremology
courtship
fiddler crab
multimodal signal
stamina
vibrational signal
author_facet Sophie L. Mowles
Michael Jennions
Patricia R. Y. Backwell
author_sort Sophie L. Mowles
title Multimodal communication in courting fiddler crabs reveals male performance capacities
title_short Multimodal communication in courting fiddler crabs reveals male performance capacities
title_full Multimodal communication in courting fiddler crabs reveals male performance capacities
title_fullStr Multimodal communication in courting fiddler crabs reveals male performance capacities
title_full_unstemmed Multimodal communication in courting fiddler crabs reveals male performance capacities
title_sort multimodal communication in courting fiddler crabs reveals male performance capacities
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Courting males often perform different behavioural displays that demonstrate aspects of their quality. Male fiddler crabs, Uca sp., are well known for their repetitive claw-waving display during courtship. However, in some species, males produce an additional signal by rapidly stridulating their claw, creating a ‘drumming’ vibrational signal through the substrate as a female approaches, and even continue to drum once inside their burrow. Here, we show that the switch from waving to drumming might provide additional information to the female about the quality of a male, and the properties of his burrow (multiple message hypothesis). Across males there was, however, a strong positive relationship between aspects of their waving and drumming displays, suggesting that drumming adheres to some predictions of the redundant signal hypothesis for multimodal signalling. In field experiments, we show that recent courtship is associated with a significant reduction in male sprint speed, which is commensurate with an oxygen debt. Even so, males that wave and drum more vigorously than their counterparts have a higher sprint speed. Drumming appears to be an energetically costly multimodal display of quality that females should attend to when making their mate choice decisions.
topic biotremology
courtship
fiddler crab
multimodal signal
stamina
vibrational signal
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.161093
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