Document Type

Article

Publication Date

8-14-2025

Published In

Ecology And Evolution

Abstract

Theory and past experimental work suggest that as males age, the strength of their mate preference should decrease. However, the empirical work investigating this question has primarily been conducted in insects that have very short life spans and often live for just a single mating season. This leaves a gap in our understanding of the relationship between male mate preference and age across taxa, as age can conflate with other ecological changes in a single mating season. In this study, we ask how the strength of preference for large female body size changes as males age in a long-lived insect, Bolitotherus cornutus. We used a two-pronged approach of both laboratory behavior trials and cross-sectional analyses of observations in a wild metapopulation to answer this question. We found that males overall exhibited a preference for large females, but there was no significant difference between the preference strength of young and old males in either the laboratory experiment or field observations. Our work suggests that age may not play as important a role in variation in male mate preference as predicted by previous findings, especially in long-lived animals. Instead, processes such as senescence, breeding season termination, or mate availability may be stronger drivers of male mate preference variation.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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This work is freely available under a Creative Commons license.

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