- Leks are male-biased aggregations formed for mating, where sperm is the only resource acquired by visiting females.
- One of the many advantages of leks is the possibility to efficiently assess the quality of potential mates by comparing aggregated individuals of the same sex with one another.
- When direct mate choice occurs in a lekking species it is often exhibited by females, but some studies have also demonstrated the presence of male mate choice.
- We investigate mate choice in the lek forming European woodwasp, Sirex noctilio.
- We determine the importance of age and size as predictors of mating success.
- We demonstrate that mating is not random and that male and female traits affect mating success.
- Age plays an important role in mating success in both males and females with older males mating more and younger females being more attractive and more receptive to mating.
- Relative male size seems to play a role in mating success with males being more successful when attempting to mate with females that are larger than them.
- Publisher - Current Organization Name: Natural Resources Canada
- Publisher - Organization Name at Publication: Natural Resources Canada (NRCan)
- Publisher - Organization Section Name: Natural Resources Canada (NRCan)
- Contributor: Jeremy Allison; Bernard Slippers; Jaco Greeff; Tree Protection Cooperative Programme; Department of Environment, Forestry and Fisheries; United States Department of Agriculture - Forest Service Forest Health Protection
- Licence: Open Government Licence - Canada
Data and Resources
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Determinants of mating success in a lek-mating speciesXLSXEnglish French dataset XLSX
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