When male birds know they're about to get it on, that action is more likely to spawn a bigger brood of eggs compared to spontaneous copulation, a new study finds.
Previous studies have shown that when two male birds mate with a female in a competition to pass on their genetic material, they end in a draw and both become fathers to an equal number of eggs.
But researchers wondered whether Pavlovian conditioning (the process that set Ivan Pavlov's dogs drooling for meat whenever they heard a ringing bell) could give one male an advantage over the other.
Using male quails, Nicolle Matthews of the University of Texas and her colleagues placed each of two birds into two differently designed chambers for 30 minutes over a period of five days.
Whenever the males were in one of the two chambers, they were then allowed access to a female, and so learned to anticipate having the chance to mate when placed in that chamber (so it functioned sort of like the avian equivalent of a Barry White album).
On test day, each male was placed in one of the two chambers and then allowed to copulate with the female. Researchers then tested the paternity of the female's eggs.
The results, detailed in the September issue of the journal Psychological Science: the quail in the "Barry White chamber" fathered more of the eggs.
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