Female beauty in nature may have less to do with attracting the opposite sex than previously thought.
A new mathematical model suggests that romantic attention, by itself, is not enough to give attractive females an evolutionary edge over their plainer counterparts—even when those good looks help them find superior mates.
The findings, published in the journal Evolution, show that for females, the benefits of beauty likely go beyond success in the mating market.
In most animals, males are the showy sex; females are drab and inconspicuous. Flamboyant features like the peacock’s tail and the lion’s mane help males vie for the favor of females. But in some species, including crustaceans, insects, lizards, fish, and primates, females can be eye-catching too.
Why some animals look showy, but others play it safe
Females of the blue crab Callinectes sapidus develop red-tipped claws that some liken to painted fingernails. Deeper red is more alluring to males, who look for crimson claws over lighter orange ones.
Female dance flies have feathery fringes on their hind legs which they wrap around their abdomens to make them appear wider and more fertile. Females adorned with frillier legs attract more mates.
Biologists have studied male embellishments such as showy feathers, manes, wattles, horns, and antlers for more than a century. But female “beauty” is often overlooked, says study author Courtney Fitzpatrick, who was a postdoctoral fellow at Duke University at the time of the study.
Attractive males get more girls and sire more offspring because of their good looks. But the evolutionary payoff for flashy females is less clear.
Do flashy females ‘marry up’?
The extra work involved in producing and nurturing young means females are less likely to benefit from scoring additional sexual partners.
The standard answer is that females go for quality, not quantity. Most studies assume that flashy females use their good looks to “marry up” and win the attention of high-quality mates, such as males that are better providers or more likely to be good parents.
But the assumption is rarely put to the test, Fitzpatrick says.
To see if the idea holds up, Fitzpatrick and coauthor Maria Servedio of the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill developed a mathematical model that predicts changes in the frequency of ornamented females in a population over time.
Why most animals don’t need flashy tail feathers
In their model, some males are better mates and some are pickier. Physically attractive females in the model are sometimes able to lure superior males with whom they produce more surviving offspring than their less glamorous peers. Attractive females then pass their good looks on to their daughters, who also have a reproductive advantage, and so on from one generation to the next.
But surprisingly, the effect was weaker than expected.
Something else is going on
Contrary to expectation, the model shows that winning the romantic interest of picky males is not enough to explain how desirable feminine features become widespread—even when better-looking females are more likely to land a good catch.
The results of the mathematical approach support other research suggesting that female beauty doesn’t evolve just to win mates.
Instead, traits such as the dance fly’s frilly legs or the blue crab’s red-tipped claws may help their bearers compete for other resources, such as social status or protection from predators.
The results are consistent with an idea called the “social selection” hypothesis, first proposed three decades ago by theoretical biologist Mary Jane West-Eberhard of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute.
Source: Duke University