The dark-ventral-patch of male red deer, a sexual signal that conveys the degree of involvement in rutting behavior

Abstract Background In polygynous mammals, signalling may play a decisive role in mating behavior, mediating the intensity of male fights and female mate choice. During the rutting season, male red deer may show a visible dark patch in their ventral fur. Recently, this patch has been suggested to ac...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eva de la Peña, Javier Pérez-González, José Martín, Giovanni Vedel, Juan Carranza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-05-01
Series:BMC Zoology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40850-021-00083-9
id doaj-e86b83c12cb3414e9873266ad7587fc0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e86b83c12cb3414e9873266ad7587fc02021-05-30T11:21:15ZengBMCBMC Zoology2056-31322021-05-016111310.1186/s40850-021-00083-9The dark-ventral-patch of male red deer, a sexual signal that conveys the degree of involvement in rutting behaviorEva de la Peña0Javier Pérez-González1José Martín2Giovanni Vedel3Juan Carranza4Wildlife Research Unit (UIRCP), University of CórdobaWildlife Research Unit (UIRCP), University of CórdobaDepartment of Evolutionary Ecology, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (MNCN-CSIC)Wildlife Research Unit (UIRCP), University of CórdobaWildlife Research Unit (UIRCP), University of CórdobaAbstract Background In polygynous mammals, signalling may play a decisive role in mating behavior, mediating the intensity of male fights and female mate choice. During the rutting season, male red deer may show a visible dark patch in their ventral fur. Recently, this patch has been suggested to act as a flexible sexual signal, due to its relationships with other variables such as age, body size, antler development, volatile compounds, or the competitive environment. The analysis of fur pigmentation at the ventral patch suggests that this might also visually indicate the male intrinsic predisposition to take part in mating competition. Results To assess the possible role of this trait as a communicative signal related to mate competition, we used red deer behavioral observations during the rut in Doñana National Park (Spain) to examine the link between the degree of expression of the dark ventral patch and the rutting activity (assessed from both intra-and-inter-sexual behaviors). Consistent with our predictions, we found in a field study that males with large dark patches showed a higher frequency of rutting behaviors (mainly roaring and flehmen), more interactions with females, and attained larger harem sizes. Conclusions The dark ventral patch was a better predictor of male behavior than antler tines or territory holding, thus standing as a short-term indicator of male willingness to invest in mating competition.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40850-021-00083-9Red deerDark ventral patch expressionMating effortSexual behaviorsMate competitionMating success
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eva de la Peña
Javier Pérez-González
José Martín
Giovanni Vedel
Juan Carranza
spellingShingle Eva de la Peña
Javier Pérez-González
José Martín
Giovanni Vedel
Juan Carranza
The dark-ventral-patch of male red deer, a sexual signal that conveys the degree of involvement in rutting behavior
BMC Zoology
Red deer
Dark ventral patch expression
Mating effort
Sexual behaviors
Mate competition
Mating success
author_facet Eva de la Peña
Javier Pérez-González
José Martín
Giovanni Vedel
Juan Carranza
author_sort Eva de la Peña
title The dark-ventral-patch of male red deer, a sexual signal that conveys the degree of involvement in rutting behavior
title_short The dark-ventral-patch of male red deer, a sexual signal that conveys the degree of involvement in rutting behavior
title_full The dark-ventral-patch of male red deer, a sexual signal that conveys the degree of involvement in rutting behavior
title_fullStr The dark-ventral-patch of male red deer, a sexual signal that conveys the degree of involvement in rutting behavior
title_full_unstemmed The dark-ventral-patch of male red deer, a sexual signal that conveys the degree of involvement in rutting behavior
title_sort dark-ventral-patch of male red deer, a sexual signal that conveys the degree of involvement in rutting behavior
publisher BMC
series BMC Zoology
issn 2056-3132
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Background In polygynous mammals, signalling may play a decisive role in mating behavior, mediating the intensity of male fights and female mate choice. During the rutting season, male red deer may show a visible dark patch in their ventral fur. Recently, this patch has been suggested to act as a flexible sexual signal, due to its relationships with other variables such as age, body size, antler development, volatile compounds, or the competitive environment. The analysis of fur pigmentation at the ventral patch suggests that this might also visually indicate the male intrinsic predisposition to take part in mating competition. Results To assess the possible role of this trait as a communicative signal related to mate competition, we used red deer behavioral observations during the rut in Doñana National Park (Spain) to examine the link between the degree of expression of the dark ventral patch and the rutting activity (assessed from both intra-and-inter-sexual behaviors). Consistent with our predictions, we found in a field study that males with large dark patches showed a higher frequency of rutting behaviors (mainly roaring and flehmen), more interactions with females, and attained larger harem sizes. Conclusions The dark ventral patch was a better predictor of male behavior than antler tines or territory holding, thus standing as a short-term indicator of male willingness to invest in mating competition.
topic Red deer
Dark ventral patch expression
Mating effort
Sexual behaviors
Mate competition
Mating success
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40850-021-00083-9
work_keys_str_mv AT evadelapena thedarkventralpatchofmalereddeerasexualsignalthatconveysthedegreeofinvolvementinruttingbehavior
AT javierperezgonzalez thedarkventralpatchofmalereddeerasexualsignalthatconveysthedegreeofinvolvementinruttingbehavior
AT josemartin thedarkventralpatchofmalereddeerasexualsignalthatconveysthedegreeofinvolvementinruttingbehavior
AT giovannivedel thedarkventralpatchofmalereddeerasexualsignalthatconveysthedegreeofinvolvementinruttingbehavior
AT juancarranza thedarkventralpatchofmalereddeerasexualsignalthatconveysthedegreeofinvolvementinruttingbehavior
AT evadelapena darkventralpatchofmalereddeerasexualsignalthatconveysthedegreeofinvolvementinruttingbehavior
AT javierperezgonzalez darkventralpatchofmalereddeerasexualsignalthatconveysthedegreeofinvolvementinruttingbehavior
AT josemartin darkventralpatchofmalereddeerasexualsignalthatconveysthedegreeofinvolvementinruttingbehavior
AT giovannivedel darkventralpatchofmalereddeerasexualsignalthatconveysthedegreeofinvolvementinruttingbehavior
AT juancarranza darkventralpatchofmalereddeerasexualsignalthatconveysthedegreeofinvolvementinruttingbehavior
_version_ 1721420545123155968