Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Theory and past experimental work suggest that as males age, the strength of their mate preference should decrease. However, the empirical work investigating this question has primarily been conducted in insects that have very short life spans and often live for just a single mating season. This leaves a gap in our understanding of the relationship between male mate preference and age across taxa, as age can conflate with other ecological changes in a single mating season. In this study, we ask how the strength of preference for large female body size changes as males age in a long-lived insect, . We used a two-pronged approach of both laboratory behavior trials and cross-sectional analyses of observations in a wild metapopulation to answer this question. We found that males overall exhibited a preference for large females, but there was no significant difference between the preference strength of young and old males in either the laboratory experiment or field observations. Our work suggests that age may not play as important a role in variation in male mate preference as predicted by previous findings, especially in long-lived animals. Instead, processes such as senescence, breeding season termination, or mate availability may be stronger drivers of male mate preference variation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12353013PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71958DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mate preference
16
male mate
12
preference
8
males age
8
single mating
8
mating season
8
preference large
8
age
6
mate
5
male
4

Similar Publications

The effects of exogenous testosterone and facial attractiveness on men's altruistic punishment behavior.

Psychoneuroendocrinology

September 2025

Zhejiang Philosophy and Social Science Laboratory for Research in Early Development and Childcare, Hangzhou Normal University, Hangzhou, China; Department of Psychology, Jing Hengyi School of Education, Hangzhou Normal University, Hangzhou, China. Electronic address:

Altruistic punishment is crucial in promoting cooperation and maintaining social fairness. The third-party punishment (TPP) game, a typical paradigm testing altruistic punishment behavior, involves individuals incurring personal costs to punish norm violations others commit. This altruistic (costly) punishment has been suggested as an adaptive trait in human evolution, influencing behaviors such as mate selection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sex differences in gaze patterns while viewing dynamic and static sexual scenes.

Maturitas

August 2025

Turku PET Centre, University of Turku and Åbo Akademi University, Finland; Turku University Hospital, Turku, Finland; Department of Psychology, University of Turku, Finland. Electronic address:

Objectives: Faces and bodies serve as important cues of physical attractiveness and reproductive fitness. Previous studies indicate that there are sex-related differences in the visual processing of erotic stimuli. We investigated gaze patterns and sex differences during sexual perception.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Researchers have suggested that men with more masculine facial characteristics have stronger immune systems but are perceived to be less likely to invest resources in partners and offspring. How women resolve this putative trade-off between the costs and benefits of choosing a masculine mate have previously been reported to be associated with women's openness to uncommitted relationships (i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Assortative mating-the tendency to choose partners similar to oneself-is a ubiquitous phenomenon in mate choice. Despite numerous proposed explanations, a parsimonious mechanism has been overlooked: When individuals choose mates on the basis of heritable traits and preferences, offspring inherit a trait and the corresponding preference from each parent, creating genetic correlations that link having a trait to preferring that same trait. We evaluated this mechanism with an agent-based model simulating 100 generations in which agents, with traits and preferences each uniquely determined by 40 loci, chose reproductive partners based on preferences.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

For many animals, options abound when choosing a mate in socially complex environments like a breeding chorus or lek. In such environments, receivers often choose their mate based on individual differences in signal repetition rate. However, signallers also differ in the regularity with which they produce repeated signals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF