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Faking it

In the snake world, cross-dressing is a smart sexual strategy

TRANSVESTITE snakes may seduce unsuspecting males in order to sap their
competitors鈥 energy鈥攁llowing them to get it on with the real females at
their leisure.

The idea follows the study of male garter snakes, some of which fool other
males into mating with them by secreting female chemicals from their skin. The
reason for this strange behaviour has been a mystery since its discovery 15
years ago. But now Rick Shine, an evolutionary biologist from the University of
Sydney, and his colleagues from Oregon State University, Corvallis, think they
have worked out the evolutionary strategy behind the behaviour.

The team observed red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis
parietalis) in Manitoba, Canada, which had recently emerged from
hibernation. The snakes formed 鈥渕ating balls鈥, where several suitors competed
for one female. But over a quarter of the mating balls were actually centred on
a 鈥渟he-male鈥. When the researchers studied these impostors, they found that they
were fatter than their male counterparts and crawled more slowly. Their
courtship behaviour was suppressed and they were less likely to couple with
females. 鈥淢ales that produced female skin lipids became female in behaviour as
well as attractiveness,鈥 says Shine.

To check that the snakes were not getting their hormonal disguise from
contact with females, the researchers rubbed males against females. Males
treated in this way failed to excite other males. However, when they removed the
snakes鈥 male pheromones by washing them with a solvent and adding female lipids,
the snakes became attractive to males. These 鈥渁rtificial鈥 she-males also lost
interest in sex.

But to the researchers鈥 surprise, when these she-males were captured and
tested a day later, they had become the most vigorous suitors of all. At the
same time their attractiveness to males had decreased.

The situation seemed inexplicable, until Shine realised that the hormonal
鈥渃ross-dressing鈥 was a temporary phase that all males went through upon
awakening from hibernation. Shine and his colleagues suggest that she-maleness
suppresses the snakes鈥 urge to court females while they are still weak from
hibernation, preventing them from wasting valuable energy on courting when they
are likely to fail. Masquerading as females also confuses other males,
distracting them from true females.

鈥淲e call this kind of behaviour `spite鈥,鈥 says Morris Gosling, an
evolutionary biologist at the University of Newcastle. 鈥淭he she-males diminish
the costs of courtship at the same time as duping other males.鈥

  • Source:
    Animal Behaviour (vol 59, p 349)

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