Cultivation may be described as a process of co-evolution and niche construction, with two species developing a mutualistic relationship through association, leading to coordinated change [1]. Cultivation is rare but taxonomically widespread, benefiting the cultivator, usually through increased access to food, and the cultivar, by improved growth and protection, driving co-evolutionary changes (Supplemental information). Humans cultivate more than food, producing clothing, construction materials, fuel, drugs, and ornaments. A population of male spotted bowerbirds Ptilonorhynchus (Chlamydera) maculata uses fruits of Solanum ellipticum (Figure 1A), not as food but as important components of their sexual display [2,3]. Here, we show that males...
The Spotted Bowerbird, Chlamydera maculata, appears to be sexually monomorphic. We caught and marked...
The bowerbirds of the family Ptilonorhynchida are famous for their elaborate structure which are an ...
In visually-driven seed dispersal mutualisms, natural selection should promote plant strategies that...
SummaryCultivation may be described as a process of co-evolution and niche construction, with two sp...
In many species, males must acquire resources from the environment in order to produce the sexual si...
For more than 100 years, behavioural biologists have extensively studied satin bowerbirds (Ptilonorh...
The bowerbirds in New Guinea and Australia include species that build the largest and perhaps most e...
Numerous studies have focussed on the relationship between female choice and the multiple exaggerate...
Male–male competition can cause less competitive males to pursue alternative mating strategies or de...
Although sexual selection is typically considered the predominant force driving the evolution of rit...
Much attention has been devoted to understanding the evolution of elaborate male ornaments and how t...
Competition for limited resources can have fundamental implications for population dynamics. However...
Males often produce elaborate displays that increase their attractiveness to females, and some speci...
ehMales with elaborate secondary sexual traits can enhance their mating success both by choosing to ...
The Spotted Bowerbird, Chlamydera maculata, appears to be sexually monomorphic. We caught and marked...
The bowerbirds of the family Ptilonorhynchida are famous for their elaborate structure which are an ...
In visually-driven seed dispersal mutualisms, natural selection should promote plant strategies that...
SummaryCultivation may be described as a process of co-evolution and niche construction, with two sp...
In many species, males must acquire resources from the environment in order to produce the sexual si...
For more than 100 years, behavioural biologists have extensively studied satin bowerbirds (Ptilonorh...
The bowerbirds in New Guinea and Australia include species that build the largest and perhaps most e...
Numerous studies have focussed on the relationship between female choice and the multiple exaggerate...
Male–male competition can cause less competitive males to pursue alternative mating strategies or de...
Although sexual selection is typically considered the predominant force driving the evolution of rit...
Much attention has been devoted to understanding the evolution of elaborate male ornaments and how t...
Competition for limited resources can have fundamental implications for population dynamics. However...
Males often produce elaborate displays that increase their attractiveness to females, and some speci...
ehMales with elaborate secondary sexual traits can enhance their mating success both by choosing to ...
The Spotted Bowerbird, Chlamydera maculata, appears to be sexually monomorphic. We caught and marked...
The bowerbirds of the family Ptilonorhynchida are famous for their elaborate structure which are an ...
In visually-driven seed dispersal mutualisms, natural selection should promote plant strategies that...