Honesty of a dynamic female aggressive status signal: baseline testosterone relates to bill color in female American goldfinches
Abstract
Status signals are linked to fighting ability and enable competitors to gain access to resources without risking injury in aggressive combat. The relationship between testosterone (T), a hormone that mediates aggression, and signals of status is well studied in males, but little is known about the relationship between T and female signals of status. Female and male American goldfinches Spinus tristis express a dynamic carotenoid-based orange bill color during the breeding season and previous work has demonstrated that females use orange bill color to communicate competitive ability during intrasexual competition. We test the hypothesis that female bill color reflects baseline T, which would allow receivers to directly assess a competitor's aggressive potential. We found a positive relationship between T and bill coloration in females, indicating that bill color has the ability to signal female competitive status. This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that female bill color is a reliable signal of fighting ability, and indicates that females, like males, may use coloration to signal their hormonally mediated aggressive potential.
Repository Citation
Pham, T.T, P.S. Queller, K.A. Tarvin, T.G. Murphy. January 2014. "Honesty of a dynamic female aggressive status signal: baseline testosterone relates to bill color in female American goldfinches." Journal of Avian Biology 45(1): 22-28.
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Publication Date
1-1-2014
Publication Title
Journal of Avian Biology
Department
Biology
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-048X.2013.00286.x
Keywords
Dark-eyed juncos, Red jungle fowl, Sexual selection, Social competition, Zebra finches, Immunocompetence handicap, Territorial aggression, Intrasexual selection, Mutual ornamentation, Plumage coloration
Language
English
Format
text