The Mating System of the Buff-Breasted Sandpiper: Lekking and Resource Defense Polygyny

1988 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralph V. Cartar ◽  
Bruce E. Lyon
2021 ◽  
Vol 75 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Karsten Seidelmann

Abstract The wool carder bee Anthidium manicatum is one textbook example of resource defense polygyny among solitary bees, known for intense male–male competition, forced copulations, and the extreme form of interspecific territoriality toward other flower visitors. This mating system depends on the spatial structure of the defended resource and requires several adaptations in males. The allocation of patches with host plants as well as male body size and phenology was analyzed over 3 years in the diverse habitat of a botanical garden. Anthidium manicatum males searched in groups up to 12 individuals a wide diversity of patches with various food plants of foraging females. Territories were established in small high-quality patches only. Males abandoned aggressive and territorial behavior in large patches. Available patches were occupied by males of the various body size fractions independently of each other according to patch profitability. The higher competitive weight of large males in small patches compared to spacious ones was balanced by an opposing correlation of patch profitability. Although the mating system in A. manicatum is clearly a resource defense polygyny, males were found to be plastic in their behavior, and territoriality was not consistently observed. Mate acquiring tactics, be they territory holder (bourgeois), sneaker, floater, or scrambler for mating, can be considered to be different behavioral phenotypes within one environmentally sensitive conditional strategy. Significance statement Territoriality is a rare and derived pattern in solitary bee mating behavior. In most cases of territoriality, males defend rendezvous places to meet freshly emerged, virgin females. While this type of mating behavior fits still into the framework of ancestral monandry of aculeate Hymenoptera, the continually polyandric resource defense polygyny found in the genus Anthidium is highly derived. Males occupy flower resources exploited for larval provisions and extort copulations from provisioning nesting females. Territoriality in Anthidium does not lead to a monopolization of females, the exclusion of many competitors from reproduction, and a reduction of sperm competition as is typical for resource-based mating systems. Contrary, Anthidium is a highly promiscuous species and both males and females are lifelong engaged in copulations with multiple mates. Also, the allocation of the resource fundamental to the defense polygyny was found to be more fairly balanced than expected. This study diversifies the mating system of anthidiine bees and demonstrates unusually high plasticity in the resource allocation of a territorial species.


1999 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 111
Author(s):  
G.S. Grant ◽  
S.A. Banack

We studied the reproductive biology of Pteropus tonganus on Tutuila, American Samoa from 1992 to 1994. Pteropus tonganus typically roosts in colonies consisting of harem groups averaging 5.3 females per male and peripheral single males and groups of males. The mating system appeared to have elements of both female defense polygyny and resource defense polygyny. The reproductive status of females within harems varied throughout the year so that some females appeared non-pregnant while others were pregnant or nursed large young (up to about 3/4 the length of the female). Post-partum mating was frequent, especially with females that had small dependent young. Mating, pregnancy, birthing, and young of all sizes occurred year-round. However, some evidence of bimodal peaks occurred during January and June- August.


1987 ◽  
Vol 65 (11) ◽  
pp. 2827-2829 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy A. Mousseau ◽  
Nicholas C. Collins

The mating patterns of three slimy sculpin populations from central Ontario were examined using SCUBA to determine the relationship between the degree of polygyny and the relative availability of potential nest sites. We found that sculpins were exclusively polygynous in a lake where nests were probably limiting, while in two other lakes where potential nests were much more abundant relative to male density, the predominant mating system was monogamy. Our observations of sculpin mating patterns conform to those predicted for species exhibiting resource-defense polygyny.


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. e01289
Author(s):  
Elizabeth C. Braun de Torrez ◽  
Jeffery A. Gore ◽  
Holly K. Ober

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