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Morphological signals of sex and status in spotted bowerbirds

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journal contribution
posted on 2004-01-01, 00:00 authored by J Madden, John EndlerJohn Endler, F Jury
The Spotted Bowerbird, Chlamydera maculata, appears to be sexually monomorphic. We caught and marked 118 birds in central Queensland, and sexed 88 using molecular methods. We found that our catch was strongly male-biased, both at bower sites and at non-bower feeding sites. We continued to observe the bird's behaviour after their release and so sub-divided males into sexual status groups as either bower-owners or non-owners. We searched for morphological measures, subjectively judged colour differences and quantitatively collected spectral measures of the visual properties of the crest feathers that would allow us to separate birds of differing sex and status. We found that bower owners had larger crests than non-owner males or females and that crest area provided the most accurate predictor of a bird's sex and status in a discriminant function analysis. We studied a cohort of seven males who went from non-owners to bower owners over three years, and found that their change in status was accompanied by a change in crest size – the only significant change in their morphology. Crest size did not relate to the mating success of a bower-owner. Instead, we suggest why the crest may differ between status groups and the implications that this may have for the sexual behaviour of male and female Spotted Bowerbirds.

History

Journal

Emu

Volume

104

Issue

1

Pagination

21 - 30

Publisher

Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union (aka Birds Australia)

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

0158-4197

eISSN

1448-5540

Language

eng

Notes

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Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2004, Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union (aka Birds Australia)