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Successfully mating male sage-grouse show greater laterality in courtship and aggressive interactions
Ist Teil von
Animal behaviour, 2016-01, Vol.111, p.261-267
Ort / Verlag
London: Elsevier Ltd
Erscheinungsjahr
2016
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Lateral biases in behaviours are common across animals. Greater laterality may be beneficial if it allows for more efficient neural processing, yet few studies have considered the possible importance of individual variation in lateral biases in wild animals, particularly for social behaviours. We examined lateral biases in lekking greater sage-grouse, Centrocercus urophasianus, a species in which males show lateral orientations during aggressive encounters and courtship interactions. For aggression, we found no significant lateral bias in fights, but when examining another agonistic behaviour, the side-to-side facing-past encounter, we found a left-eye bias but only in males that successfully mated with females. For courtship behaviour, we found that successfully mating males were more strongly lateralized than nonmating males, but the direction of laterality depended on whether males were using their binocular frontal field (left-eye bias) or monocular lateral hemifield (right-eye bias). Bias depended on social context as well; nonmating males showed a bias in courtship orientation only when far from the female. Our results reveal a complex pattern of laterality depending on the mating success of the male, his behaviour and the social environment in which he is acting. We found support for the hypothesis that greater laterality may be beneficial, although the mechanism for this relationship in this species remains unknown.
•Lekking male greater sage-grouse perform laterally oriented social behaviours.•Males showed lateral bias during male–male agonism and male–female courtship.•Males that mated with females showed a greater degree of bias in some cases.•Lateral bias in courtship varied according to which part of the visual field was used.•Lateral biases in social behaviours may show complex patterns when studied in the wild.