The independent role of morphology in mate choice is revealed by the rare instances where the usual association between song and morphology is disrupted.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
To summarize, the particular song a male sings, and the behavioral responses of females to song and morphological signals, are not genetically inherited in a fixed manner but are determined by learning early in life.
Plumage features constitute a major component of courtship signals.
The urgency to mate persists in all people as in all other mammals because of the evolutionary drive to continue the species, the inborn imperative for genes to reproduce and hormonal differences that evolved over millions of years.
Ideally, people find mates with whom they can express both their masculine and feminine sides.
Species can be recognized by their morphological characteristics and songs.
There has to be chemistry in a duet, but if you go beyond the point of friendship and attraction, you lose something.
Opposites attract, and I think temperament is so fundamental that you end up craving someone of the opposite temperament to complete you.
Males transmit signals in courtship through behavioral displays.
Thus mating of females was strictly along the lines of paternal song.
Almost nothing is known from hybridization studies about the inheritance of courtship behavior of females, or of their responsiveness to particular male signals.