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Irrationality in mate choice revealed by túngara frogs
126
Citations
23
References
2015
Year
Breeding BehaviorEvolutionary Game TheoryFitnessBehavioral Decision MakingChoice TheorySexual SelectionSexual Selection TheoryManagementExperimental EconomicsRational Choice ModelsDecision TheoryRelative Call AttractivenessEconomicsBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceBehavioral EconomicsTúngara FrogsEvolutionary BiologyBusinessDecision ScienceAnimal Behavior
Mate choice models derive from traditional microeconomic decision theory and assume that individuals maximize their Darwinian fitness by making economically rational decisions. Rational choices exhibit regularity, whereby the relative strength of preferences between options remains stable when additional options are presented. We tested female frogs with three simulated males who differed in relative call attractiveness and call rate. In binary choice tests, females' preferences favored stimulus caller B over caller A; however, with the addition of an inferior "decoy" C, females reversed their preferences and chose A over B. These results show that the relative valuation of mates is not independent of inferior alternatives in the choice set and therefore cannot be explained with the rational choice models currently used in sexual selection theory.
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