Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The displays of the White‐throated Manakin Corapipo gutturalis in Suriname

1986; Wiley; Volume: 128; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1474-919x.1986.tb02096.x

ISSN

1474-919X

Autores

Richard O. Prum,

Tópico(s)

Avian ecology and behavior

Resumo

The courtship displays of the White‐throated Manakin Corapipo gutturalis (Pipridae) were observed in the Brownsberg Nature Preserve, Suriname, for over 50 h on 17 days between 17 October and 17 December 1982, and the display elements and calls are described. Males perform displays from perches in trees, in flight and on mossy fallen logs. The perch displays are performed as preliminaries to the log‐approach displays which are given while in flight towards the log. The log‐approach displays vary in length and complexity from a short flight from a nearby perch down to the log, to a dramatic flight above the canopy and back to the log. As males land, they perform a series of aerial manoeuvres and give a complex vocal and mechanical display call. Males may also perform a slower silent moth‐flight log approach. The log displays are the culminating elements of courtship and copulation is known to take place there (Davis, T.A.W. 1949. Ibis 91: 146–147). All the courtship displays can be performed either solitarily by a single male or by a group of up to seven males which compete simultaneously for access to single display sites at a series of different logs. Fourteen display logs were located dispersed in two areas 250 m wide which were separated by 350 m, but it was not determined whether these areas constituted separate leks with different pools of possible mates. The behaviour of C. gutturalis is compared with that of the White‐ruffed Manakin Corapipo leucorrhoa and other manakins. Male Corapipo appear to have abandoned defence of exclusive advertisement territories in favour of simultaneous competition for a series of different display sites. This detached or mobile form of lek is unique among known manakins and a mechanism for its evolution through female choice is discussed.

Referência(s)