Postcopulatory competition between males, in the form of sperm competition, is a widespread phenomenon in many animal species. The extent to which sperm compe-tition has been an important selective pressure during human evolution remains controversial, however. The authors review critically the evidence that human males and females have psychological, behavioral, and physiological adaptations that evolved in response to selection pressures associated with sperm competition. The authors consider, using evidence from contemporary societies, whether sperm competition is likely to have been a significant adaptive problem for ancestral humans and examine the evidence suggesting that human males have physiological and psychological mechanisms tha...
Sperm experience intense and varied selection that dramatically impacts the evolution of sperm quali...
Ramm SA, Stockley P. Adaptive plasticity of mammalian sperm production in response to social experie...
Ramm SA, Schärer L, Ehmcke J, Wistuba J. Sperm competition and the evolution of spermatogenesis. Mol...
Postcopulatory competition between males, in the form of sperm competition, is a widespread phenomen...
ABSTRACT—With the recognition, afforded by recent evo-lutionary science, that female infidelity was ...
With the recognition afforded by evolutionary science that female infidelity was a recurrent feature...
A comparative evolutionary psychological perspective predicts that species that recurrently faced si...
Human sperm competition—p. 2 Sperm competition was first defined as “the competition within a single...
With the recognition that female infidelity was a recurrent feature of our evolutionary past has com...
Traits that increase a male’s fertilization success during sperm competition can be harmful to femal...
<div><p>In species where females mate with multiple males, the sperm from these males must compete t...
Sperm competition occurs when the sperm of multiple males concurrently occupy the reproductive tract...
Sperm competition occurs when the sperm of multiple males concurrently occupy the reproductive tract...
In species where females mate with multiple males, the sperm from these males must compete to fertil...
In species where females mate with multiple males, the sperm from these males must compete to fertil...
Sperm experience intense and varied selection that dramatically impacts the evolution of sperm quali...
Ramm SA, Stockley P. Adaptive plasticity of mammalian sperm production in response to social experie...
Ramm SA, Schärer L, Ehmcke J, Wistuba J. Sperm competition and the evolution of spermatogenesis. Mol...
Postcopulatory competition between males, in the form of sperm competition, is a widespread phenomen...
ABSTRACT—With the recognition, afforded by recent evo-lutionary science, that female infidelity was ...
With the recognition afforded by evolutionary science that female infidelity was a recurrent feature...
A comparative evolutionary psychological perspective predicts that species that recurrently faced si...
Human sperm competition—p. 2 Sperm competition was first defined as “the competition within a single...
With the recognition that female infidelity was a recurrent feature of our evolutionary past has com...
Traits that increase a male’s fertilization success during sperm competition can be harmful to femal...
<div><p>In species where females mate with multiple males, the sperm from these males must compete t...
Sperm competition occurs when the sperm of multiple males concurrently occupy the reproductive tract...
Sperm competition occurs when the sperm of multiple males concurrently occupy the reproductive tract...
In species where females mate with multiple males, the sperm from these males must compete to fertil...
In species where females mate with multiple males, the sperm from these males must compete to fertil...
Sperm experience intense and varied selection that dramatically impacts the evolution of sperm quali...
Ramm SA, Stockley P. Adaptive plasticity of mammalian sperm production in response to social experie...
Ramm SA, Schärer L, Ehmcke J, Wistuba J. Sperm competition and the evolution of spermatogenesis. Mol...