case0602: Mate Preference of Platyfish

case0602R Documentation

Mate Preference of Platyfish

Description

Do female Platyfish prefer male Platyfish with yellow swordtails? A.L. Basolo proposed and tested a selection model in which females have a pre-existing bias for a male trait even before the males possess it. Six pairs of males were surgically given artificial, plastic swordtails—one pair received a bright yellow sword, the other a transparent sword. Females were given the opportunity to engage in courtship activity with either of the males. Of the total time spent by each female engaged in courtship during a 20 minute observation period, the percentages of time spent with the yellow-sword male were recorded.

Usage

case0602

Format

A data frame with 84 observations on the following 3 variables.

Percentage

The percentage of courtship time spent by 84 females with the yellow-sword males

Pair

Factor variable with 6 levels—"Pair1", "Pair2", "Pair3", "Pair4", "Pair5" and "Pair6"

Length

Body size of the males

Source

Ramsey, F.L. and Schafer, D.W. (2013). The Statistical Sleuth: A Course in Methods of Data Analysis (3rd ed), Cengage Learning.

References

Basolo, A.L. (1990). Female Preference Predates the Evolution of the Sword in Swordtail Fish, Science 250: 808–810.

Examples

str(case0602)  
attach(case0602)   

## EXPLORATION
plot(Percentage ~ Length,  
  xlab="Length of the Two Males",  
  ylab="Percentage of Time Female Spent with Yellow-Sword Male",  
  main="Percentage of Time Spent with Yellow Rather than Transparent Sword Male") 
abline(h=50)    # Draw a horizontal line at 50% (i.e. the "no preference" line)  
myAov  <- aov(Percentage ~ Pair)  
plot(myAov, which=1) # Resdiual plot  
summary(myAov)  

# Explore possibility of linear effect, as in Display 6.5 
myAov2        <- aov(Percentage ~ Pair - 1)  # Show the estimated means.
myContrast    <- rbind(c(5, -3, 1, 3, -9, 3))  
if(require(multcomp)){   # Use the multcomp library  
  myComparison  <- glht(myAov2, linfct=myContrast)    
  summary(myComparison, test=adjusted("none")) 
}


# Simpler exploration of linear effect, via regression (Ch. 7)
myLm          <- lm(Percentage ~ Length)   
summary(myLm)            

# ONE-SAMPLE t-TEST THAT MEAN PERCENTAGE = 50%, IGNORING MALE PAIR EFFECT
t.test(Percentage, mu=50, alternative="greater") # Get 1-sided p-value
t.test(Percentage, alternative="two.sided")  # Get C.I.

## SCATTERPLOT FOR PRESENTATION
plot(Percentage ~ Length,  
    xlab="Length of the Two Males (mm)",   
    ylab="Percentage of Time Female Spent with Yellow-Sword Male", 
    main="Female Preference for Yellow Rather than Transparent Sword Male",  
    pch=21, lwd=2, bg="green", cex=1.5 )  
abline(h=50,lty=2,col="blue",lwd=2)  
text(29.5,52,"50% (no preference)", col="blue")   
   
detach(case0602) 

Sleuth3 documentation built on Jan. 25, 2024, 3:01 p.m.