Roosters that call out in alarm prove popular with the hens
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Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

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ALARM CHARMRoosters that readily call out in alarm when danger looms tend to win favor with hens and sire plenty of chicks. Full StoryC. Evans In the long run it’s not a guy’s looks that count. It’s his little
clucks in the face of danger.
A high rate of calling out in alarm turns out to be one of
the clearest signs of a rooster with a successful sex life, says Chris Evans of
Macquarie University
in Sydney, Australia. A rooster that readily
gives warning calls when danger looms tends to rank high in number of times
hens accept him as a mate and in number of chicks sired, Evans, David R. Wilson
and colleagues report in the September Animal
Behaviour.
A rooster may waggle a huge, ruby-red comb at hens, but if
they’ve had a chance to get to know him, his splendor doesn’t mean success. In
tests that mimic real life among fowl, behavior trumps looks.
“As far as I know, their paper is the first to address the
sexiness of alarm calling,” says Dan Blumstein of the University
of California, Los Angeles, who has studied alarm calls in marmots.
“Alarm calling is a classic problem in evolutionary
biology,” Evans says. Squawking as a hawk circles or a fox sneaks up raises the
chances of the squawker getting eaten. While the rest of the neighborhood may
benefit, the alarm caller seems to be taking a puzzling altruistic risk.
For 20 years now, Evans has been studying alarm calls in
golden Sebright fowl, the same Gallus
gallus species as industrially farmed chickens, but with the behavior of
wild birds. The fowl give two kinds of alarm calls: a string of “tuk tuk” clucking
for a terrestrial predator and a whistley call for airborne danger.
Before Evans’ work, only primates had been known to give these
referential calls, the animal equivalent of “Predator above!” instead of just an
“Eeeeaaaaahhhh!” that communicates fear.
Evans says he is working toward understanding how the calls
affect the lives of the birds and, eventually, how the alarms evolved.
Clucks of warning might work as show-off heroics, Evans
speculates. Alarm-calling roosters could be males in such fine fettle that they
can afford to take a little extra risk. However, he says, so far he just has the
correlation between calling and mating, not evidence for which leads to the
other.
In another proposed scenario, calls are the risks a dad
takes to improve the chances his offspring will survive. In support of this
idea, Evans cites more research not yet published that finds mated roosters giving
30 percent more alarm calls than males that haven’t had their chance yet.
The two possibilities aren’t mutually exclusive, Evans says.
The protective-dad effect still allows room for alarm calling as seductive
gestures in their own right.
A triumph of behavior over looks might seem like an outright
contradiction of earlier studies, but Evans offers an explanation. Laboratory tests
that offer hens a choice of two unfamiliar roosters find that females choose
males with big, colorful combs, he says. But outside the lab, fowl spend their
lives in social groups, and hens hardly ever encounter unfamiliar males.
Evans and his colleagues set up more realistic tests,
starting in 1999. Researchers put sets of three roosters and three hens into
big pens and allowed days for the birds to work out dominance hierarchies and
get to know each other. Then for almost two weeks, researchers monitored bird
behavior from clucking to mating and recorded physical traits. “We measured
everything we could think of,” Evans says.
In a large statistical analysis, the research team looked
for factors that went along with either frequent mating or a large share of the
chicks. In the end, dominance in the male hierarchy mattered for mating success,
which wasn’t a surprise. Independent of dominance though, high rates of alarm
calling also marked a favored male.
For animals in stable social groups, Blumstein says,
“behavior can be sexy.”
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