In many species, mating with multiple males confers benefits to females, but these benefits may be offset by the direct and indirect costs associated with elevated mating frequency. Although mating frequency (number of mating events) is often positively associated with the degree of multiple mating (actual number of males mated), most studies have experimentally separated these effects when exploring their implications for female fitness. In this paper I describe an alternative approach using the guppy Poecilia reticulata, a livebearing freshwater fish in which females benefit directly and indirectly from mating with multiple males via consensual matings but incur direct and indirect costs of mating as a consequence of male sexual harassmen...
Because not all females are equally attractive, and because mating reduces the chances of getting fu...
Males pay considerable reproductive costs in acquiring mates (precopulatory sexual selection) and in...
Several studies suggest that females may offset the costs of genetic incompatibility by exercising p...
In many species, mating with multiple males confers benefits to females, but these benefits may be o...
Sexual harassment is a common outcome of sexual conflict over mating rate. A large number of studies...
Contrary to traditional belief, the decisions that females make before, during and after mating shap...
Male offspring production in promiscuously mating species is typically more skewed than female offsp...
Males can maximise their fitness by copulating with as many females as possible. Although this behav...
Multiply mated female guppies Poecilia reticulata descended from the Tacarigua population in Trinida...
Sexual selection is often prevented during captive breeding in order to maximize effective populatio...
A large number of studies have identified several direct costs of sexual harassment, including energ...
Abstract: In species in which individuals alternate between mating strategies, males may respond to ...
Abstract Background The observation that females mate multiply when males provide nothing but sperm ...
BackgroundThe observation that females mate multiply when males provide nothing but sperm - which se...
It is widely acknowledged that in most species sexual selection continues after mating. Although it ...
Because not all females are equally attractive, and because mating reduces the chances of getting fu...
Males pay considerable reproductive costs in acquiring mates (precopulatory sexual selection) and in...
Several studies suggest that females may offset the costs of genetic incompatibility by exercising p...
In many species, mating with multiple males confers benefits to females, but these benefits may be o...
Sexual harassment is a common outcome of sexual conflict over mating rate. A large number of studies...
Contrary to traditional belief, the decisions that females make before, during and after mating shap...
Male offspring production in promiscuously mating species is typically more skewed than female offsp...
Males can maximise their fitness by copulating with as many females as possible. Although this behav...
Multiply mated female guppies Poecilia reticulata descended from the Tacarigua population in Trinida...
Sexual selection is often prevented during captive breeding in order to maximize effective populatio...
A large number of studies have identified several direct costs of sexual harassment, including energ...
Abstract: In species in which individuals alternate between mating strategies, males may respond to ...
Abstract Background The observation that females mate multiply when males provide nothing but sperm ...
BackgroundThe observation that females mate multiply when males provide nothing but sperm - which se...
It is widely acknowledged that in most species sexual selection continues after mating. Although it ...
Because not all females are equally attractive, and because mating reduces the chances of getting fu...
Males pay considerable reproductive costs in acquiring mates (precopulatory sexual selection) and in...
Several studies suggest that females may offset the costs of genetic incompatibility by exercising p...