高清福利片

European robin bird (Erithacus rubecula) singing.
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Fatal attraction: when animals' mating signals beckon predators

1 June 2022
Bird song and pheromones can draw unwanted attention
Enticing sex is a risky business for animals - but to differing degrees. Those that use calls or pheromones to attract mates are in far greater danger from predators than those using visual displays.

Reproduction is the ultimate goal in life for most animals, but securing a mate is hard work. You must not only find a potential suitor, but hold their attention, identify yourself, and advertise your quality.

To achieve this, animals use 鈥渟exual signals鈥. These conspicuous displays or ornaments help beat out the competition in the contest for mates. And some of the most beautiful aspects of the animal world have evolved for this purpose.

Sexual signals are costly, though, and not just in terms of the energy it takes to sing or dance. One seemingly obvious and profound cost is predation. The idea is simple. Just as your private phone call may be overheard by nosy passersby, so too may the bright colours and loud calls of sexual displays catch the eyes and ears of predators seeking a meal.

From the shimmering wings of butterflies, to the sweet songs of birds, we admire these signals in other species daily 鈥 even though they鈥檙e not meant for us. So how often are they intercepted by predators? And is the risk equal across all kinds of signals?

My colleagues and I sought to answer these questions in a听. We found the dangers to signallers are real, although much more varied than we once thought.

Anolis sagre and Pseudacris crucifer

Animals use colours, calls, and smells to attract mates, but do they also attract predators? Pictured:听Anolis sagre听(濒别蹿迟),听Pseudacris crucifer听(right). Credit: Ryan Hagerty/USFWS.

Eavesdropping on private conversations

Biologists describe the illicit interception of sexual signals as 鈥渆avesdropping鈥, and it has been formally studied since at least Charles Darwin. The Tungara frogs of Central and South America are a classic example; their loud听听the unwanted attention of parasitic flies in search of a blood meal.

To make sense of the wealth of work available on this topic we scoured the literature for every published study of predatory eavesdropping, and found 78 in total. Most were similar in design, in that they placed fake models of animals or their signals out in the wild and recorded how often these were attacked by predators.

After statistically combining the results of these studies we found that, as expected, communicating with mates does increase the risk of being predated. Animals bearing sexual signals were roughly five times more likely to be attacked than those that were not actively signalling.

Digging deeper, however, we discovered the risk of being eaten depends on听how听the animals are communicating with each other. Those that use calls or pheromones to attract mates are in far greater danger than those using visual displays, which surprisingly experience no increased risk at all.

Two butterflies

There are a few possible reasons for why visual displays to attract mates do not increase predation risk as much as some other signals. Credit: Dr Thomas White.

Not-so-risky business

The dangers of booming calls or strong pheromones are intuitive enough, but why do bold colours not raise the risk of being eaten? We suspect there are two related reasons.

One is that most predators are fussy eaters. Even those with broad diets such as insect-eating birds and lizards prefer to eat familiar prey, and only rarely try new things. Since most animals present their sexual displays intermittently, colourful ornaments may be unfamiliar to predators, who will then avoid them out of caution.

The other possible reason is that many animals use vivid colours as warning signals. Consider the striking black and red abdomens of redback spiders, which advertise the fact that they are听. Predators may be generally wary of conspicuous patterns, then, since the animals bearing them are often more trouble than they鈥檙e worth.

So what do these results tell us about the evolution of communication? For one, we might expect visual displays to be more conspicuous and elaborate than other types of signals such as calls or pheromones, given predators pose little threat in the face of extravagance.

And in populations where predation is a persistent threat, we should expect to find that adaptive evolution favours the use of less risky signals, such as colour or motion (or the abandonment of signalling altogether). We can see this take place among the Pacific field crickets of Hawaii, where males have lost the ability to sing in response to intense听.

Weaponizing the language of sex

Predators aren鈥檛 the only ones interested in eavesdropping on prey; humans are too. Pests such as aphids and grasshoppers are not only a nuisance in our gardens, but also wreak havoc on Australian crops to the tune of听听each year.

Aphids.

Aphids cause hundreds of millions of dollars鈥 worth of damage to Aussie crops each year. Credit: Shutterstock.

Enterprising researchers have shown we can hijack the sexual signals of these pests to combat them in two ways. One is by using said signals to attract and trap the pests themselves, as in the case of artificial acoustic signals mimicking听.

Or we can tap into the existing interests of predators to lure them toward pests in greater numbers. This has proven effective in managing aphids, for example, where we now commercially synthesise the sex pheromones of females. This attracts predatory wasps which听, and ultimately kill them.

Of course, our study only offers a brief guide to bio-inspired pest management. More generally, it shines new light on what was thought to be a fundamental cost of sex, and shows that while attracting mates can be a dangerous game, it depends entirely on how you play.


This piece is written by Dr Thomas White from the University of Sydney School of Life and Environmental Sciences.

It was originally published in听.听

Hero image:听European robin bird (Erithacus rubecula) singing. Credit: Adobe Stock.

Thomas White

Lecturer & Early Career Development Fellow
While attracting mates can be a dangerous game, it depends entirely on how you play

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