<p>Distributions of the proportions of (A) <i>retreat</i> and (B) high-intensity aggressive behaviors (<i>hold</i> and <i>lunge</i>, combined) performed by individual 1 in the paired male encounters. If the behaviors are exhibited approximately equally by both members of the pairs, the distributions should be centered around 0.5.</p
<p>Mean rate (± SE) per minute of event-behaviour during confrontation of territorial males against ...
<p>Group-size distribution for individuals who are fighting (number of observations, <i>n</i> = 50) ...
<p>Intensity of aggression (StepDom) of males = 1, of females = 0.1, initial dominance of females an...
<p>Occurrences pair<sup>−1</sup> (means ± s.e.m.) of high-intensity aggressive behaviors (<i>hold</i...
<p>Comparison of the number of agonistic, courtship and submissive behaviors performed by subordinat...
<p>The four most common male fighting behaviours are performed at different rates by defenders compa...
<p>ns: p>0.05,</p>*<p>p<0.05,</p>**<p>p<0.01,</p>***<p>p<0. 0.001 (chi-square tests).</p><p>Statisti...
<p>(A) The number of mounts, (B) the latency to the first mount, (C) the number of intromissions, (D...
<p>Aggressive displays by subordinate males elicit undirected responses by the dominant male. Most c...
<p>When males direct their antagonistic persistence more towards higher-fitness females, the tails o...
<p>The winning, dominant male either had a higher aggression score compared to the losing, subordina...
<p>Low aggression pools (solid lines) had a three times greater reproductive output than high aggres...
Number of dominance interactions per dyad in the 12 months preceding Tuck's death. All observations ...
Social isolation increased initiations, escalations, and winning probability in males but not female...
<p>Sex class combinations are: ff (females attacking female), fm (female attacking male), mf (male a...
<p>Mean rate (± SE) per minute of event-behaviour during confrontation of territorial males against ...
<p>Group-size distribution for individuals who are fighting (number of observations, <i>n</i> = 50) ...
<p>Intensity of aggression (StepDom) of males = 1, of females = 0.1, initial dominance of females an...
<p>Occurrences pair<sup>−1</sup> (means ± s.e.m.) of high-intensity aggressive behaviors (<i>hold</i...
<p>Comparison of the number of agonistic, courtship and submissive behaviors performed by subordinat...
<p>The four most common male fighting behaviours are performed at different rates by defenders compa...
<p>ns: p>0.05,</p>*<p>p<0.05,</p>**<p>p<0.01,</p>***<p>p<0. 0.001 (chi-square tests).</p><p>Statisti...
<p>(A) The number of mounts, (B) the latency to the first mount, (C) the number of intromissions, (D...
<p>Aggressive displays by subordinate males elicit undirected responses by the dominant male. Most c...
<p>When males direct their antagonistic persistence more towards higher-fitness females, the tails o...
<p>The winning, dominant male either had a higher aggression score compared to the losing, subordina...
<p>Low aggression pools (solid lines) had a three times greater reproductive output than high aggres...
Number of dominance interactions per dyad in the 12 months preceding Tuck's death. All observations ...
Social isolation increased initiations, escalations, and winning probability in males but not female...
<p>Sex class combinations are: ff (females attacking female), fm (female attacking male), mf (male a...
<p>Mean rate (± SE) per minute of event-behaviour during confrontation of territorial males against ...
<p>Group-size distribution for individuals who are fighting (number of observations, <i>n</i> = 50) ...
<p>Intensity of aggression (StepDom) of males = 1, of females = 0.1, initial dominance of females an...