Sexual ornaments might reliably indicate the ability to cope with parasites and diseases, and a better ability to mount a
primary inflammatory response to a novel challenge. Carotenoid-based ornaments are amongst the commonest sexual signals of
birds and often influence mate choice. Because carotenoids are immuno-stimulants, signallers may trade-off allocating these
to ornamental colouration or using them for immune responses, so carotenoid-based ornaments might be particularly useful as
honest indicators of immuno-compentence. Tetraonid birds, such as the red grouse
Lagopus lagopus scoticus, exhibit supra-orbital yellow–red combs, a conspicuous ornament which functions in intra- and inter-sexual selection. The
colour of combs is due to epidermal pigmentation by carotenoids, while their size is testosterone-dependent. In this study,
I investigated whether comb characteristics, and in particular, comb colour, indicated immuno-competence in free-living male
red grouse. I assessed T-cell-mediated immunity using a standardised challenge with phytohaemagglutinin. Red grouse combs
reflect in the red and in the ultraviolet spectrum of light, which is not visible to humans but that grouse most likely see,
so I measured comb colour across the whole bird visible spectrum (300–700 nm) using a reflectance spectrometer. I found that
males with bigger and redder combs, but with less ultraviolet reflectance, had greater T-cell-mediated immune response. Comb
colour predicted T-cell-mediated immune response better than comb size, indicating that the carotenoid-based colouration of
this ornament might reliably signal this aspect of male quality.
Keywords Sexual selection - Carotenoid - Cellural immunity - Phytohaemagglutinin - Tetraonid bird