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A blue-footed booby, mid-dance. Photo: Pete, via Wikimedia Commons
It鈥檚 quite the show: First, he lifts the left, oh so earnestly. Then, he lifts the right, serious as can be. He sways like so, slowly, and after awhile might invert his wings toward the sky, in a pose both graceful and awkward, while giving a plaintive whistle.
This, you might know, is the dance of the male , a fish-eating seabird found in the Galapagos, Peru, and Mexico. Of course, it's performed to impress a female, which will join him in dance if it's seductive enough. But the bluer those feet, the better鈥攁nd the younger, it turns out.
Recently, a Spanish-Mexican research team used 30 years of data to study one particular booby population. was that male germ lines鈥攖he DNA sequence passed from one generation to the next鈥攚ere increasingly deteriorated in older birds. Though that children of men over 50 or 60 may be more likely to have genetic illnesses because of gametic mutations, it鈥檚 long been thought that biological old age was unique to humans and the animals we keep; that, in nature, animals were eaten or undone by parasites before, genetically speaking, they were no longer quite themselves. But boobies have proved us wrong: They don't just live a long time, they reach reproductive senescence, too.
Fascinatingly, blue鈥檚 the external clue. The intensity of those famous feet is a worthy indication of age, thus 鈥渕irroring鈥 the risk that a male might pass on a genetic mutation to its chicks. Since female boobies are less attractive to lighter, older hues (who wants wispy blue, when you can have cerulean?), it suggests that those feet may be a measure of fitness in an additional sense, allowing females to avoid producing young with congenital illnesses (that is, abnormalities present at birth).
"The study provides us with a new way of looking at what lies behind sexual signals, pointing to the importance of sexual selection in eliminating genetic mutations," , a researcher at the University of Vigo and lead author of the study, published in the Journal of Evolutionary Biology.
Sorry, old boy boobies. But dance on, dance on鈥攊t's for the good of the population.