Social causes of variation in animal communication systems have important evolutionary consequences, including speciation. The relevance of these effects depends on how widespread they are among animals. There is evidence for such effects not only in birds and mammals, but also frogs and some insects and spiders. Here, we analyze the social ontogeny of adult mate preferences in an insect, Enchenopa treehoppers. In these communal plant‐feeding insects, individuals reared in isolation or in groups differ in their mate preferences, and the group‐reared phenotype can be rescued by playbacks to isolation‐reared individuals. We ask about the relative role of signaling experience and signaling practice during ontogeny on the development of adult mating preferences in Enchenopa females. Taking advantage of variation in the signal experience and signaling practice of isolation‐reared individuals, we find switch‐like effects for experience and practice on female mate preference phenotypes, with individuals having some experience and practice as juveniles best rescuing the group‐reared preference phenotype. We discuss how understanding the nature and distribution of social‐ontogenetic causes of variation in mate preferences and other sexual traits will bring new insights into how within‐ and between‐population variation influences the evolution of communication systems.
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