Inter-Specific Aggression between the Collared Flycatcher and the Pied Flycatcher: The Selective Agent for the Evolution of Light-Coloured Male Pied Flycatcher Populations?
- 30 November 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Ornis Scandinavica
- Vol. 19 (4) , 287-289
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3676723
Abstract
The average plumage colour of the head and back of male Pied Flycatchers varies geographically. Light-coloured males live in sympatry, dark-coloured males in allopatry with the Collared Flycatcher. Because the two species of flycatcher compete for nesting holes, inter-specific aggression may have been a selective agent behind the evolution of light-coloured male Pied Flycatchers. Experiments with studded dummies of male Pied Flycatchers showed that male Collared Flycatchers were more aggressive towards a black dummy than towards a light-coloured one. Light-coloured male Pied Flycatchers may avoid attacks by male Collared Flycatchers either because they appear less threatening to the Collared Flycatcher in the competition for nest-holes (i.e. inter-specific status signalling) or because they closely resemble female Collared Flycatchers (i.e. inter-specific female mimicry).This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- An experimental study of the function of the red epaulettes and the black body colour of male red-winged blackbirdsAnimal Behaviour, 1987
- Evolution of variation in male secondary sexual characteristicsBehavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 1987
- Geographic Variation in Secondary Sexual Plumage Colour Characteristics of the Male Pied FlycatcherOrnis Scandinavica, 1986