A social learning primacy trend in mate-copying: an experiment in Drosophila melanogaster

Author:

Santiago Araújo Ricardo1ORCID,Nöbel Sabine123ORCID,Antunes Diogo F.1ORCID,Danchin Etienne14ORCID,Isabel Guillaume4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire & Évolution Diversité Biologique (EDB UMR 5174), Université de Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées, CNRS, IRD, UPS , 31062 Toulouse, France

2. Université Toulouse 1 Capitole and Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse (IAST) , Toulouse, France

3. Department of Zoology, Animal Ecology, Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg , 06120 Halle (Saale), Germany

4. Centre de Recherches sur la Cognition Animale (CRCA), Centre de Biologie Intégrative (CBI), CNRS UMR 5169, Université de Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées , Toulouse, France

Abstract

Social learning is learning from the observation of how others interact with the environment. However, in nature, individuals often need to process serial social information and may favour either the most recent information (recency bias), constantly updating knowledge to match the environment, or the information that appeared first in the series (primacy bias), which may slow down adjustment to environmental change. Mate-copying is a widespread form of social learning in a mate choice context related to conformity in mate choice, and where a naive individual develops a preference for a given mate (or mate phenotype) seen being chosen by conspecifics. Mate-copying is documented in most vertebrate taxa and in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster . Here, we tested experimentally whether female fruit flies show a primacy or a recency bias by presenting pictures of a female copulating with one of two contrastingly coloured male phenotypes. We found that after two sequential contradictory demonstrations, females show a tendency to prefer males of the phenotype preferred in the first demonstration, suggesting that mate-copying in D. melanogaster is not based on the most recently observed mating and may be influenced by a form of primacy bias.

Publisher

The Royal Society

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