Sepioteuthis
New Member
slide show of Chaucer chasing Guin
Now that Guin is the only male in the free range with 2 females he's been strutting around in his courtship colors. He has made some attempts at seducing the females but so far without any luck.
Yesterday I decided to try to take pictures of one of these interactions, but what I got was a little different.
This time all Guin had to do to get 'yelled at' by one of the girls, was show up.
In the 30 minutes that following I took about 100 pictures, but I managed to bring it back to 19 for your viewing pleasure.
Click here to view the slide show.
I photoshopped some text into the pictures to clarify who's doing what.
I know the quality of the pictures isn't great, but I tried to stay out of their view as much as possible so I wouldn't interrupt anything.
I thought this behavior was very interesting because all the 'aggression' came from Chaucer, the female, and the only provocation was Guin's colors. Guin was on the defensive the entire time and he didn't make any attempts to court her. Was Chaucer just testing Guin?
Anyway, I'll let you watch the slide show before starting the speculations about how to interpret this behavior.![Smile :) :)](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
- Suzanne
Now that Guin is the only male in the free range with 2 females he's been strutting around in his courtship colors. He has made some attempts at seducing the females but so far without any luck.
Yesterday I decided to try to take pictures of one of these interactions, but what I got was a little different.
This time all Guin had to do to get 'yelled at' by one of the girls, was show up.
In the 30 minutes that following I took about 100 pictures, but I managed to bring it back to 19 for your viewing pleasure.
I photoshopped some text into the pictures to clarify who's doing what.
I know the quality of the pictures isn't great, but I tried to stay out of their view as much as possible so I wouldn't interrupt anything.
I thought this behavior was very interesting because all the 'aggression' came from Chaucer, the female, and the only provocation was Guin's colors. Guin was on the defensive the entire time and he didn't make any attempts to court her. Was Chaucer just testing Guin?
Anyway, I'll let you watch the slide show before starting the speculations about how to interpret this behavior.
- Suzanne
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