Fish like flash, researchers have discovered. Give a male stickleback some shiny baubles and he'll decorate his nest with them - females prefer males with colourful abodes.
In the lab, males' favourite knick-knacks seem to be red foil sticks, report ecologists Sara ɓstlund-Nilsson and Mikael Holmlund of the University of Oslo in Norway - they offered the fish blue beads, and blue and silver foil sticks, as well as the red ones 1.
Females spent nearly 90% of their time inspecting gaudy nests rather than plain ones. In the wild, male three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) weave tunnels from pondweed or twigs. Females lay their eggs in these tunnels, and tend them until they hatch.
In the mating season, healthy males' bellies turn deep red, and females choose ruddy males. By building with the same colour, males could be creating "an out-of-body ornament", speculates Iain Barber of the University of Wales in Aberystwyth, UK.
Barber has found that female stickleback also prefer neat nests ”€ compact structures with few loose ends. Males keep their nests neat by making a glue that they use as cement; tidy nests show that a male has a plentiful supply, and so is in good health.
Decoration might also advertise a male's ability to build and maintain a nest. Male sticklebacks try to steal ornaments from their neighbours, and predators attack nests, making conspicuousness risky. Alternatively, baubles could signpost the way in.
Many male fish build nests for their offspring, but sticklebacks are the first to be shown departing from a utilitarian blueprint. The finding should inspire people to look at other species, says Carl Smith of Queen Mary and Westfield College, London. "It may be a more general phenomenon."
The champion decorator of the animal kingdom is the bower bird. Males build complex, highly decorated structures that have no purpose other than to impress females. "No fish builds anything like a bower," says Barber.
References
ɓstlund-Nilsson, S. & Holmlund, M. The artistic three-spined stickleback ( Gasterosteous aculeatus ). Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology , published online, doi:10.1007/s00265-002-0574-z (2003). |Article|
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