Male golden-collared manakins (Manacus vitellinus) perform a high-speed acrobatic courtship display punctuated by loud 'snaps' produced by the wings. Females join males on display courts to select individuals for copulation; females follow displaying males but do not perform acrobatics or make wing snaps. Sexually dimorphic courtship displays such as those performed by manakins are the result of intense sexual selection and suggest that differences between sexes exist at neural levels as well. We examined sex differences in the volume of brain areas that might be involved in the male manakin courtship display and in the female assessment of this display. We found that males had a larger hippocampus (HP, spatial learning) and arcopallium (AP...
In order to breed successfully, organisms exhibit multiple strategies to enhance mate attraction, su...
Many species perform elaborate physical displays to court mates and compete with rivals, but the bio...
peer reviewedIn many vertebrate species the medial preoptic area projects to a premotor nucleus, the...
Acrobatic display behaviour is sexually selected in manakins (Pipridae) and can place high demands o...
Males of many animal species perform specialized courtship behaviours to gain copulations with femal...
Animal courtship displays can be spectacular behaviors employing extraordinary and specialized movem...
Many animals engage in spectacular courtship displays, likely recruiting specialized neural, hormona...
Coordinated courtship displays are a common feature of species forming long-term pair bonds. In lekk...
Sexual selection was proposed by Darwin to explain the evolution of male sexual traits such as ornam...
Male Golden-collared manakins (Manacus vitellinus) of Panama perform an acrobatic and noisy courtshi...
Steroidal control of motor function may be especially important for species in which courtship requi...
Many male tropical birds perform elaborate courtship displays. These displays can include visual and...
Abstract The males of the Golden-collared manakin (Manacus vitellinus), a passerine bird of the Neo...
Sex steroids control vertebrate behavior by modulating neural circuits specialized for sex steroid s...
Body size mediates life history, physiology, and inter- and intra-specific interactions. Within spec...
In order to breed successfully, organisms exhibit multiple strategies to enhance mate attraction, su...
Many species perform elaborate physical displays to court mates and compete with rivals, but the bio...
peer reviewedIn many vertebrate species the medial preoptic area projects to a premotor nucleus, the...
Acrobatic display behaviour is sexually selected in manakins (Pipridae) and can place high demands o...
Males of many animal species perform specialized courtship behaviours to gain copulations with femal...
Animal courtship displays can be spectacular behaviors employing extraordinary and specialized movem...
Many animals engage in spectacular courtship displays, likely recruiting specialized neural, hormona...
Coordinated courtship displays are a common feature of species forming long-term pair bonds. In lekk...
Sexual selection was proposed by Darwin to explain the evolution of male sexual traits such as ornam...
Male Golden-collared manakins (Manacus vitellinus) of Panama perform an acrobatic and noisy courtshi...
Steroidal control of motor function may be especially important for species in which courtship requi...
Many male tropical birds perform elaborate courtship displays. These displays can include visual and...
Abstract The males of the Golden-collared manakin (Manacus vitellinus), a passerine bird of the Neo...
Sex steroids control vertebrate behavior by modulating neural circuits specialized for sex steroid s...
Body size mediates life history, physiology, and inter- and intra-specific interactions. Within spec...
In order to breed successfully, organisms exhibit multiple strategies to enhance mate attraction, su...
Many species perform elaborate physical displays to court mates and compete with rivals, but the bio...
peer reviewedIn many vertebrate species the medial preoptic area projects to a premotor nucleus, the...