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Testosterone, signal coloration, and signal color perception in male zebra finch contests.

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Date
2022-02
Authors
Green, PA
George, EM
Rosvall, KA
Johnsen, S
Nowicki, S
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Abstract
Many animals use assessment signals to resolve contests over limited resources while minimizing the costs of those contests. The carotenoid-based orange to red bills of male zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) are thought to function as assessment signals in male-male contests, but behavioral analyses relating contest behaviors and outcomes to bill coloration have yielded mixed results. We examined the relationship between bill color and contests while incorporating measurements of color perception and testosterone (T) production, for an integrative view of aggressive signal behavior, production, and perception. We assayed the T production capabilities of 12 males in response to a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) challenge. We then quantified the initiation, escalation, and outcome of over 400 contests in the group, and measured bill color using calibrated photography. Finally, because signal perception can influence signal function, we tested how males perceive variation in bill coloration, asking if males exhibit categorical perception of bill color, as has been shown recently in female zebra finches. The data suggest that males with greater T production capabilities than their rivals were more likely to initiate contests against those rivals, while males with redder bills than their rivals were more likely to win contests. Males exhibited categorical color perception, but individual variation in the effect of categorical perception on color discrimination abilities did not predict any aspects of contest behavior or outcomes. Our results are consistent with the hypotheses that T plays a role in zebra finch contests and that bill coloration functions as an aggressive signal. We suggest future approaches, based on animal contest theory, for how links among signals, perception, and assessment can be tested.
Type
Journal article
Subject
Assessment signaling
GnRH challenge
bill color
categorical perception
dominance signaling
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26532
Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1111/eth.13247
Publication Info
Green, PA; George, EM; Rosvall, KA; Johnsen, S; & Nowicki, S (2022). Testosterone, signal coloration, and signal color perception in male zebra finch contests. Ethology : formerly Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie, 128(2). pp. 131-142. 10.1111/eth.13247. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26532.
This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Scholars@Duke

Johnsen

Sonke Johnsen

Professor of Biology
Nowicki

Stephen Nowicki

Professor of Biology
Our lab studies animal communication, asking both proximate and ultimate questions about how signaling systems function and how they evolve. Most of our work is done with birds, although lab members have studied a variety of other taxa. One major theme that runs through our work is to understand how signal reliability (“honesty”) is maintained in the face of the competing evolutionary interests of signal senders and receivers. We use both laboratory experiments and field-based analys
Alphabetical list of authors with Scholars@Duke profiles.
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