Question:

Which one or more of the following is/are prediction(s) or assumption(s) of the handicap principle for the evolution of sexual signals?

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In the optimal diet model, a predator includes the item with the highest profitability \(E/h\); higher abundance of that item further promotes specialization on it.
Updated On: Aug 26, 2025
  • Females prefer costly signals.
  • Honest signals are costly to produce.
  • Males displaying costly signals are not chosen by females.
  • Costly signals are reliable indicators of signaller quality
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The Correct Option is A, B, D

Solution and Explanation

Step 1: Recall the handicap principle.
The handicap principle (Zahavi, 1975) suggests that costly traits/signals evolve because they act as honest indicators of male quality. Only high-quality males can afford to produce and maintain these costly traits.

Step 2: Evaluate each option.
(A) \emph{Females prefer costly signals.}
Yes — under sexual selection, females are predicted to prefer costly traits because they are harder to fake and thus reflect male fitness. (B) \emph{Honest signals are costly to produce.}
Yes — costliness is the mechanism ensuring honesty; if signals were cheap, low-quality males could also produce them, making them unreliable. (C) \emph{Males displaying costly signals are not chosen by females.}
Incorrect — the principle argues the opposite: costly signals \emph{increase} mating success because females prefer them. (D) \emph{Costly signals are reliable indicators of signaller quality.}
Yes — this is the central assumption. Cost ensures reliability: only strong males can bear the handicap.

Step 3: Combine.
Hence, the assumptions/predictions are (A), (B), and (D). Final Answer:
\[ \boxed{(A), (B), \text{ and } (D)} \]
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