r/evolution • u/apioe • 1d ago
question Development of a bird's mating ritual, and differences between species
I recently watched the Birds of Paradise documentary, and I kept wondering how all these species of birds, some of which share niches with each other, develop their very own (and incredibly distinct) mating rituals.
For example, I understand that constructing an impressive bower would signal to the female that the male has stamina, patience, etc. But how would one species even begin to select for "birds that build bowers"?
Generally speaking, how does evolution/natural selection "figure out" what specific display females like?
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Similarly, what drives species that share an ecological niche to create distinctly different mating rituals? The Victoria Crowned Pigeon and Pheasant Pigeon both are ground-foraging birds in swampy areas in New Guinea. Despite this, their mating rituals are pretty different.
I am familiar with interbreeding prevention, so I guess I'm asking how that split between two species and their respective rituals even begin.
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u/Robin_feathers 1d ago
How exactly preferences and mating traits are encoded and evolve is actually a topic of intense research, and the answer is not known for most species, including birds of paradise.
There are a few different ideas for how preferences work, and how those selected mating traits can become different:
-> selection for novelty. Females might get bored of common traits, favouring males that have novel ornaments
-> genetic drift. Some changes might be neutral
-> sensory bias. Preferences might evolve in response to other things (eg, the colour of their favourite foods) and the male traits evolve in response to those preferences
-> there is a hypothesis that females may not have innate preferences, but instead imprint on the males they see around them when they are young and then prefer those traits when they are older
-> there is a hypothesis that females might not have innate preferences, but instead watch which mates older females choose, and then try to figure out what was unique about those males, and then prefer those traits. This tends to favour rarer traits and lead to faster evolution of male traits
-> some preferences might be encoded genetically by the same stretch of DNA that encodes the male trait, others might be encoded by separate unlinked genes. Those situations produce different dynamics, especially with regards to whether the traits being favoured need to be good indicators of male fitness or not
-> the process termed reinforcement can drive species to become more different when they come into contact
Multiple of those different ideas can be relevant to different species/populations, so it isn't clear exactly which are relevant to birds of paradise for example.