TY - JOUR
T1 - Mate choice screening in captive solitary carnivores
T2 - the role of male behavior and cues on mate preference and paternity in females of a model species, American mink (Neovison vison)
AU - Noer, Christina Lehmkuhl
AU - Balsby, Thorsten Johannes Skovbjerg
AU - Anistoroaei, Razvan Marian
AU - Stelvig, Mikkel
AU - Dabelsteen, Torben
PY - 2017/11
Y1 - 2017/11
N2 - Mate choice studies suggest that choosy females benefit from increased fecundity, litter size, and offspring survival. Thus, providing females with the opportunity to choose among potential mates, deemed genetically suitable based on studbook data, might improve breeding management in production and zoo animals and thereby the sustainability of captive populations. Investigating mate preference via odor from potential mates before animal transfer is a proposed strategy for incorporating mate choice into breeding management. In this study, we test whether olfactory cues and signals from males can be used to assess and measure female mate preference in American mink. Eighteen females were subjected to a 4-day stimulus test in which females showed a preference for one of two males’ urine and feces. Subsequently, each female was subjected to a 10-day mate preference test involving the same two males of the first test. Paternity tests revealed that 13 females had offspring, which could be assigned to only one male, suggesting that these females performed a mate choice. In nine of these females preference during the stimulus test was directed toward the male that fathered their offspring. Our results suggest that even though there was a preference difference in scent stimulus trials from potential mates this preference was not predictive of eventual mate preference or paternity. Other factors such as aspects of male behavior seem to play a role, when the mates are introduced. Our study supports that mate preference and mate choice are complex matters influenced by multiple cues and signals.
AB - Mate choice studies suggest that choosy females benefit from increased fecundity, litter size, and offspring survival. Thus, providing females with the opportunity to choose among potential mates, deemed genetically suitable based on studbook data, might improve breeding management in production and zoo animals and thereby the sustainability of captive populations. Investigating mate preference via odor from potential mates before animal transfer is a proposed strategy for incorporating mate choice into breeding management. In this study, we test whether olfactory cues and signals from males can be used to assess and measure female mate preference in American mink. Eighteen females were subjected to a 4-day stimulus test in which females showed a preference for one of two males’ urine and feces. Subsequently, each female was subjected to a 10-day mate preference test involving the same two males of the first test. Paternity tests revealed that 13 females had offspring, which could be assigned to only one male, suggesting that these females performed a mate choice. In nine of these females preference during the stimulus test was directed toward the male that fathered their offspring. Our results suggest that even though there was a preference difference in scent stimulus trials from potential mates this preference was not predictive of eventual mate preference or paternity. Other factors such as aspects of male behavior seem to play a role, when the mates are introduced. Our study supports that mate preference and mate choice are complex matters influenced by multiple cues and signals.
KW - American mink
KW - breeding success
KW - mate choice
KW - mate preference
KW - olfaction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85032972073&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/zoo.21383
DO - 10.1002/zoo.21383
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 29105815
AN - SCOPUS:85032972073
SN - 0733-3188
VL - 36
SP - 367
EP - 381
JO - Zoo Biology
JF - Zoo Biology
IS - 6
ER -