Beauty beacon: correlated strategies for the Fisher runaway process
Daniil Ryabko, Angustias Vaca, Prudencio Pazoca

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that correlated female choice strategies, which consider external random factors, can significantly influence sexual selection and promote diversity, potentially leading to complex trait evolution and speciation.
Contribution
It introduces correlated strategies in sexual selection models, showing how environmental randomness can drive choosiness and trait complexity in evolution.
Findings
Choosiness can emerge with over 25% cost against random mating.
Correlated strategies can sustain costs over 35%.
More attributes in ornaments increase the advantage of choice.
Abstract
Suppose that females choose males based on attributes that do not signal any genetic quality that is not related to the choice itself. Can being choosy confer selective advantage in this situation? We introduce correlated strategies, which means that females, when making their choice, may take into consideration external and independent random factors that are known to be observable by all. Individual-based simulation is used to show that, in this case, choosiness can emerge against the cost of over 25\% when pitted against randomly mating females. Moreover, after being established in the population, it can sustain costs of over 35\% . While such costs are not biologically plausible, they demonstrate unequivocally that sexual choice is a strong evolutionary force. Thus, correlated strategies are shown to be an evolutionary tool that channels randomness from the environment into…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and animal studies · Animal Behavior and Reproduction · Evolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation
