A conflict of interest between the sexes prevents optimal parental investment in parents in monogamous species. Most notably in biparental birds, parents invest in their young according to mate value, with the parent of higher (lower) mate value reducing (increasing) their parental investment. We tested similar hypotheses in a sample of 408 married couples with children. The results showed that, for both men and women (but more for the men than the women), parental warmth and care correlated negatively with the extent to which good-gene and good-provider mate values compared favorably with those of their peers and spouse, whereas good-father and good-mother mate values correlated positively with parental investment. These findings highlight...
What can evolutionary biology tell us about male-female differences in preferences concerning family...
What can evolutionary biology tell us about male-female differences in preferences concerning family...
In human societies, parents often have a strong influence on the mate choice of their offspring. Mor...
The difference in genetic relatedness between parents and offspring results into traits such as beau...
Male and female parents often provide different type and amount of care to their offspring. Three ma...
Parental care is often costly1; hence, in sexually reproducing species where both male and female pa...
Species with paternal care show less exaggerated sexual ornamentation than those in which males do n...
Social monogamy, closely associated with bi-parental care, is the most frequent pairing system found...
Parents in many animal species care for their offspring. In some species, males care more; in other ...
Though rarely mate-limited, females in a wide variety of species express traits commonly associated ...
Biparental care of offspring is both a form of cooperation and a source of conflict. Parents face a ...
Evolutionary reasoning indicates that certain traits are more beneficial when they are found in a ma...
Parental care provided by males occurs in a diverse array of animals and there are large differences...
'Parentally biased favouritism' occurs when the two parents differentially care for individual offsp...
Homosexual behaviour occurs in over 130 species of birds, yet explaining its maintenance in evolutio...
What can evolutionary biology tell us about male-female differences in preferences concerning family...
What can evolutionary biology tell us about male-female differences in preferences concerning family...
In human societies, parents often have a strong influence on the mate choice of their offspring. Mor...
The difference in genetic relatedness between parents and offspring results into traits such as beau...
Male and female parents often provide different type and amount of care to their offspring. Three ma...
Parental care is often costly1; hence, in sexually reproducing species where both male and female pa...
Species with paternal care show less exaggerated sexual ornamentation than those in which males do n...
Social monogamy, closely associated with bi-parental care, is the most frequent pairing system found...
Parents in many animal species care for their offspring. In some species, males care more; in other ...
Though rarely mate-limited, females in a wide variety of species express traits commonly associated ...
Biparental care of offspring is both a form of cooperation and a source of conflict. Parents face a ...
Evolutionary reasoning indicates that certain traits are more beneficial when they are found in a ma...
Parental care provided by males occurs in a diverse array of animals and there are large differences...
'Parentally biased favouritism' occurs when the two parents differentially care for individual offsp...
Homosexual behaviour occurs in over 130 species of birds, yet explaining its maintenance in evolutio...
What can evolutionary biology tell us about male-female differences in preferences concerning family...
What can evolutionary biology tell us about male-female differences in preferences concerning family...
In human societies, parents often have a strong influence on the mate choice of their offspring. Mor...