Rr. Warner et Lm. Dill, Courtship displays and coloration as indicators of safety rather than of male quality: the safety assurance hypothesis, BEH ECOLOGY, 11(4), 2000, pp. 444-451
Male courtship displays and bright coloration are usually assumed to provid
e information to females about some aspect of the male's value as a mate. H
owever, in some species, courtship may serve another function-namely, indic
ating the current predation risk at the mating site and assuring the female
that it is safe to mate there at this time. We developed this safety assur
ance hypothesis (SAH) and tested its predictions in the bluehead wrasse (Th
alassoma bifasciatum), a Caribbean reef fish. Females in this species come
to males' territories to spawn, and males court each arriving female. Males
with larger white flank patches court less intensely than less bright male
s. We show that such males are probably more visible to predators and thus
need not court so intensely to provide the same degree of safety assurance
to a female. When model lizardfish predators are presented at spawning site
s, males habituate to them quickly, but newly arriving females who see the
predator are expected to demand more assurance of site safety. Accordingly,
and consistent with the SAH, males court females more intensely (longer av
erage courtship bout length) under such circumstances, but males with brigh
t flank patches do not increase their courtship as much as duller males do.
Despite this relatively low intensity of courtship, the spawning rate of b
right males does not. decline relative to that of duller males in the prese
nce of a predator, suggesting that bright coloration conveys a differential
benefit. Females of species like the bluehead wrasse, who spawn repeatedly
over the course of their life, are expected to be more concerned with thei
r own risk of mortality during each spawning bout than with the quality of
a particular male. It is in such species that we expect the SAH to be most
applicable.