Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their offspring is still highly debated. However, this may have resulted from the failure of empirical tests to identify large and predictable fitness returns to females from strategic adjustment. Here we test the effect of diet quality and maternal condition on facultative sex ratio adjustment in the color polymorphic Gouldian finch (Erythrura gouldiae), a species that exhibits extreme maternal allocation in response to severe and predictable (genetically-determined) fitness costs. On high quality diets, females produced a relatively equal sex ratio, but over-produced sons in poor dietary conditions. Despite the lack of sexual size dimorphism, nu...
Theory predicts that parents adjust the sex ratio of their brood to the sexually selected traits of ...
When the relative fitness of mate and female offspring varies with environmental conditions, evoluti...
This is the publisher's version, which can also be found at: http://www.jstor.org/stable/246165
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
Theory predicts that mothers should adjust offspring sex ratios when the expected fitness gains or r...
1. A major component of sex-allocation theory, the Trivers-Willard Model (TWM), posits that sons and...
Female birds have been shown to have a remarkable degree of control over the sex ratio of the offspr...
Sex allocation theory predicts that parents are selected to bias their progeny sex ratio (SR) toward...
Tests of sex allocation theory in vertebrates are usually based on verbal arguments. However, the op...
Wild and captive zebra finches (Taenopygia guttata), like several other species, produce a male-bias...
AbstractExperimental studies of wild birds suggest that females have a previously unappreciated abil...
Sex allocation theory predicts that females should bias their reproductive investment towards the se...
The differential allocation hypothesis predicts increased investment in offspring when females mate ...
Theory predicts that parents adjust the sex ratio of their brood to the sexually selected traits of ...
When the relative fitness of mate and female offspring varies with environmental conditions, evoluti...
This is the publisher's version, which can also be found at: http://www.jstor.org/stable/246165
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
Theory predicts that mothers should adjust offspring sex ratios when the expected fitness gains or r...
1. A major component of sex-allocation theory, the Trivers-Willard Model (TWM), posits that sons and...
Female birds have been shown to have a remarkable degree of control over the sex ratio of the offspr...
Sex allocation theory predicts that parents are selected to bias their progeny sex ratio (SR) toward...
Tests of sex allocation theory in vertebrates are usually based on verbal arguments. However, the op...
Wild and captive zebra finches (Taenopygia guttata), like several other species, produce a male-bias...
AbstractExperimental studies of wild birds suggest that females have a previously unappreciated abil...
Sex allocation theory predicts that females should bias their reproductive investment towards the se...
The differential allocation hypothesis predicts increased investment in offspring when females mate ...
Theory predicts that parents adjust the sex ratio of their brood to the sexually selected traits of ...
When the relative fitness of mate and female offspring varies with environmental conditions, evoluti...
This is the publisher's version, which can also be found at: http://www.jstor.org/stable/246165