Animal behaviour studies have begun to incorporate the influence of the social environment, providing new opportunities for studying signal strategies and evolution. We examined how the presence and sex of an audience influenced aggression and victory display behaviour in field-captured and lab-reared field crickets (Gryllus veletis). Audience type, rearing environment, and their interaction were important predictors in all model sets. Thus audience type may impose different costs and benefits for competing males depending on whether they are socially experienced or not. Our results suggest that field-captured winners, in particular, dynamically adjust their contest behaviour to potentially gain a reproductive benefit via female eavesdroppi...
Contest winners may perform victory displays at the conclusion of agonistic contests. Victory displa...
Animal females are generally assumed to prefer males that win fights. However, a growing number of s...
Animal females are generally assumed to prefer males that win fights. However, a growing number of s...
Animal behaviour studies have begun to incorporate the influence of the social environment, providin...
Animal behaviour studies have begun to incorporate the influence of the social environment, providin...
The relationship between signaling and aggression is still unclear despite several decades of resear...
Aggression between conspecific males is widespread in the animal kingdom, as is the fact that some i...
Plasticity in female mate choice can fundamentally alter selection on male ornaments, but surprising...
When animals use costly labile display or signal traits to display to the opposite sex, they face co...
Male field crickets frequently engage in agonistic contests to establish dominance in social interac...
The frequency and type of agonistic displays involved in male-male encounters should be significant...
To address the hypothesis that male acoustic sexual advertisement signals, in addition to chemical s...
Females generally choose mates that produce the loudest, brightest or most elaborate sexual displays...
Animal females are generally assumed to prefer males that win fights. However, a growing number of s...
Animal females are generally assumed to prefer males that win fights. However, a growing number of s...
Contest winners may perform victory displays at the conclusion of agonistic contests. Victory displa...
Animal females are generally assumed to prefer males that win fights. However, a growing number of s...
Animal females are generally assumed to prefer males that win fights. However, a growing number of s...
Animal behaviour studies have begun to incorporate the influence of the social environment, providin...
Animal behaviour studies have begun to incorporate the influence of the social environment, providin...
The relationship between signaling and aggression is still unclear despite several decades of resear...
Aggression between conspecific males is widespread in the animal kingdom, as is the fact that some i...
Plasticity in female mate choice can fundamentally alter selection on male ornaments, but surprising...
When animals use costly labile display or signal traits to display to the opposite sex, they face co...
Male field crickets frequently engage in agonistic contests to establish dominance in social interac...
The frequency and type of agonistic displays involved in male-male encounters should be significant...
To address the hypothesis that male acoustic sexual advertisement signals, in addition to chemical s...
Females generally choose mates that produce the loudest, brightest or most elaborate sexual displays...
Animal females are generally assumed to prefer males that win fights. However, a growing number of s...
Animal females are generally assumed to prefer males that win fights. However, a growing number of s...
Contest winners may perform victory displays at the conclusion of agonistic contests. Victory displa...
Animal females are generally assumed to prefer males that win fights. However, a growing number of s...
Animal females are generally assumed to prefer males that win fights. However, a growing number of s...