The handicap principle holds that costly sexual signals can reliably indicate mate quality. Only individuals of high quality can afford a strong signal - the cost of signaling is relatively lower for high quality signalers than for low quality signalers. This critical property is difficult to test experimentally because the benefit of signaling on mating success, and cost of signaling on other components of fitness, cannot easily be separated in obligate sexual organisms. We therefore studied the facultatively sexual yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which produces pheromones to attract potential mates. To precisely measure the cost of signaling, the signal was reduced or removed by deleting one or both copies of the pheromone-encoding genes ...
Meiosis in Saccharomyces yeast produces four haploid gametes that usually fuse with each other, an e...
The mating pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is one of the best understood signal transduction pat...
The origin of a new species requires a mechanism to prevent divergent populations from interbreeding...
The handicap principle holds that costly sexual signals can reliably indicate mate quality. Only ind...
The handicap principle holds that costly sexual signals can reliably indicate mate quality. Only ind...
In facultatively sexual species, lineages that reproduce asexually for a period of time can accumula...
Sex with another species can be disastrous, especially for organisms that mate only once, like yeast...
Sex with another species can be disastrous, especially for organisms that mate only once, like yeast...
Animals are known to adjust their sexual behaviour depending on mate competition. Here we report sim...
SummarySex with another species can be disastrous, especially for organisms that mate only once, lik...
Sexual reproduction is widespread, yet no comprehensive explanation for its ubiquity exists, despite...
Why sex evolved and persists is a problem for evolutionary biology, because sex disrupts favourable ...
Cells live in a chemical environment and are able to orient towards chemical cues. Unicellular haplo...
Cells live in a chemical environment and are able to orient towards chemical cues. Unicellular haplo...
Why sex evolved and persists is a problem for evolutionary biology, because sex disrupts favourable ...
Meiosis in Saccharomyces yeast produces four haploid gametes that usually fuse with each other, an e...
The mating pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is one of the best understood signal transduction pat...
The origin of a new species requires a mechanism to prevent divergent populations from interbreeding...
The handicap principle holds that costly sexual signals can reliably indicate mate quality. Only ind...
The handicap principle holds that costly sexual signals can reliably indicate mate quality. Only ind...
In facultatively sexual species, lineages that reproduce asexually for a period of time can accumula...
Sex with another species can be disastrous, especially for organisms that mate only once, like yeast...
Sex with another species can be disastrous, especially for organisms that mate only once, like yeast...
Animals are known to adjust their sexual behaviour depending on mate competition. Here we report sim...
SummarySex with another species can be disastrous, especially for organisms that mate only once, lik...
Sexual reproduction is widespread, yet no comprehensive explanation for its ubiquity exists, despite...
Why sex evolved and persists is a problem for evolutionary biology, because sex disrupts favourable ...
Cells live in a chemical environment and are able to orient towards chemical cues. Unicellular haplo...
Cells live in a chemical environment and are able to orient towards chemical cues. Unicellular haplo...
Why sex evolved and persists is a problem for evolutionary biology, because sex disrupts favourable ...
Meiosis in Saccharomyces yeast produces four haploid gametes that usually fuse with each other, an e...
The mating pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is one of the best understood signal transduction pat...
The origin of a new species requires a mechanism to prevent divergent populations from interbreeding...