2021
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/araa121
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Female ornaments: is red skin color attractive to males and related to condition in rhesus macaques?

Abstract: Sexual selection produces extravagant male traits, such as colorful ornaments, via female mate choice. More rarely, in mating systems in which males allocate mating effort between multiple females, female ornaments may evolve via male mate choice. Females of many anthropoid primates exhibit ornaments that indicate intraindividual cyclical fertility, but which have also been proposed to function as interindividual quality signals. Rhesus macaque females are one such species, exhibiting cyclical facial color var… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…However, males appeared to bias their mate choice toward females that had relatively fewer infants during postadulthood, independently of their coloration. This contrasts with previous findings in primates (rhesus macaques: Dubuc et al, 2016;Higham et al, 2011Higham et al, , 2021 and non-primate species (blue tits: Mahr et al, 2012;rock sparrows: Pilastro et al, 2003;Griggio et al, 2009;blue-footed boobies: Torres & Velando, 2005) where female colourful traits positively correlate with reproductive history or success and are attractive to males. It is complicated to interpret this result.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 73%
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“…However, males appeared to bias their mate choice toward females that had relatively fewer infants during postadulthood, independently of their coloration. This contrasts with previous findings in primates (rhesus macaques: Dubuc et al, 2016;Higham et al, 2011Higham et al, , 2021 and non-primate species (blue tits: Mahr et al, 2012;rock sparrows: Pilastro et al, 2003;Griggio et al, 2009;blue-footed boobies: Torres & Velando, 2005) where female colourful traits positively correlate with reproductive history or success and are attractive to males. It is complicated to interpret this result.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 73%
“…However, evidence from other primate species suggests that male coloration can vary according to male social characteristics (geladas, Theropithecus gelada: Bergman et al, 2009;snub-nosed monkeys, Rhinopithecus bieti: Grueter et al, 2015; drills, Mandrillus leucophaeus: Marty et al, 2009;rhesus macaques: Petersdorf et al, 2017;mandrills: Setchell & Dixson, 2001) and may influence female mating decisions (rhesus macaques: Dubuc et al, 2016;Waitt et al, 2003). Nonetheless, it should be noted that promiscuous mating, female reproductive synchrony, and strong intrasexual competition have been recently suggested to explain the evolution of female (and male) colourful and attractive ornaments in another primate species (rhesus macaques: Higham et al, 2021). Clearly, further studies are needed to better understand the role of socio-sexual and environmental pressures on the evolution and signalling function of both female-specific and mutual ornamentations across taxa.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…2014; Higham et al. 2021), and this is likely true of other catarrhine monkeys (Setchell et al. 2006; Kamilar et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In females, the coloration of these ‘sexual skins’ intensifies during the mating season due to increased vascular blood flow under the skin surface [ 37 , 41 ], and they tend to be the darkest around ovulation [ 42 , 43 ], thus broadcasting reproductive status to conspecifics. Even though the colour expressed in face and AGR are significantly correlated (for example, in mandrills [ 44 ], drills [ 45 ] and macaques [ 46 ]), it is unclear which area contains more accurate information about the reproductive cycle [ 42 ], and which region attracts more attention from conspecifics [ 39 , 47 ]. In male macaques, sexual skins also darken during the mating season [ 11 , 13 ], but it is unclear precisely what these sexual skins signal.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%