Article

Female mound-building mice prefer males that invest more in building behavior, even when this behavior is not observed

Arnaud Tognetti, Guila Ganem, Michel Raymond, and Charlotte Faurie

Abstract

Through behavioral correlations, mate choice could influence the evolution of traits that are not directly selected for, or even observed. We addressed whether mound building, a unique collective behavior observed in Mus spicilegus, could be favored by female mate choice, irrespective of whether females were able to observe the behavior. First, we introduced mixed sex groups of wild-born mice in large terraria with building materials and assessed male variation in building investment. Second, we presented females with a choice between males that invested the most versus the least in building. Females were either able to observe the males during building or not. Third, because overwintering juveniles rely on mound protection, we hypothesized that building could be a form of paternal care, and assessed whether males that invested more in building also invested more in direct offspring care. We showed that females were more attracted to males that invested the most in building, even when these behaviors were not observed. In addition, direct offspring care was negatively correlated with males’ investment in building, suggesting that two alternative paternal care strategies (mound building versus direct offspring care) may exist. Our study supports the hypothesis that building could be detectable by phenotypic cues that differ from building behavior per se and that mate choice may influence the evolution and maintenance of mound building that several authors describe as a common good.

Published in

Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, vol. 72, September 2018