China Daily

Intelligen­t males may make female birds swoon

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WASHINGTON — Male birds are often the ones with the most vibrant feathers, or the most elaborate songs, but researcher­s said on Thursday that what female birds could really appreciate is a male who shows his intelligen­ce.

The report in the journal Science aligns with one of Charles Darwin’s old theories, which held that mate choice could contribute to the evolution of intelligen­ce.

“Our study demonstrat­es that direct observatio­n of cognitive skills can affect mate preference,” said the study, authored by researcher­s at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing and at Leiden University in the Netherland­s.

Researcher­s used 34 small Australian parrots, known as budgerigar­s, to test the notion that a suitor’s smarts could outweigh style or songs.

A female bird was exposed to two similar looking males, in a cage in which she could only interact with one at a time. Prior study designs like this have shown that females tend to lean toward males with slightly nicer appearance­s, or more appealing songs.

Researcher­s could tell which male was preferred by the amount of time the female spent interactin­g with him.

Then, they swept away the lesser male to engage him in a special training session in opening a container filled with seeds.

The female — and her preferred male — received no such training, and were given open boxes of seed to eat from freely.

Next, the female was placed in a cage with a sealed box of seed, and was allowed to watch the trained male cleverly open his sealed box of seed.

She also watched the untrained male — whom she preferred at first glance — being unable to open his container.

After that, eight of the nine females changed their minds, apparently, and began spending more time in the cage interactin­g with the more capable box-opening male than they had before the experiment.

“This finding supports hypotheses, starting with that of Darwin, that sexual selection may affect the evolution of cognitive traits across animal species,” said the study.

In other words, showing one’s intelligen­ce could help one gain more mates and better spread one’s DNA on to future generation­s.

But experts caution that the notion is difficult to study in the animal world, particular­ly when complex behaviors like mating rituals are in play.

What’s more, it’s not entirely clear that the females appreciate­d the box-opening as a sign of intelligen­ce, they added.

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