Male and female parents often provide different type and amount of care to their offspring. Three major drivers have been proposed to explain parental sex roles: (i) differential gametic investment by males and females that precipitates into sex difference in care, (ii) different intensity of sexual selection acting on males and females, and (iii) biased social environment that facilitates the more common sex to provide more care. Here we provide the most comprehensive assessment of these hypotheses using detailed parental care data from 792 bird species covering 126 families. We found no evidence for the gametic investment hypothesis: neither gamete sizes nor gamete production by males relative to females was related to sex difference in p...
Theory predicts that parents adjust the sex ratio of their brood to the sexually selected traits of ...
1. A major component of sex-allocation theory, the Trivers-Willard Model (TWM), posits that sons and...
Sex roles describe sex differences in courtship, mate competition, social pair-bonds and parental ca...
Male and female parents often provide different type and amount of care to their offspring. Three ma...
Parents in many animal species care for their offspring. In some species, males care more; in other ...
In a number of insects, fishes and birds the conventional sex roles are reversed: males are the main...
Within some socially monogamous species, the relative contribution of care provided by each parent v...
Parental care provided by males occurs in a diverse array of animals and there are large differences...
In a number of insects, fishes and birds, the conventional sex roles are reversed: males are the mai...
Under many circumstances, it might be adaptive for parents to bias the investment in offspring in re...
Sex roles describe sex differences in courtship, mate competition, social pair-bonds and parental ca...
The decision to provide parental care is often associated with trade-offs, because resources allocat...
Eberhart-Phillips L, Kuepper C, Carmona-Isunza MC, et al. Demographic causes of adult sex ratio vari...
In most taxa, females are more likely than males to care for offspring. Why? Ever since Trivers ’ la...
Theory predicts that parents adjust the sex ratio of their brood to the sexually selected traits of ...
1. A major component of sex-allocation theory, the Trivers-Willard Model (TWM), posits that sons and...
Sex roles describe sex differences in courtship, mate competition, social pair-bonds and parental ca...
Male and female parents often provide different type and amount of care to their offspring. Three ma...
Parents in many animal species care for their offspring. In some species, males care more; in other ...
In a number of insects, fishes and birds the conventional sex roles are reversed: males are the main...
Within some socially monogamous species, the relative contribution of care provided by each parent v...
Parental care provided by males occurs in a diverse array of animals and there are large differences...
In a number of insects, fishes and birds, the conventional sex roles are reversed: males are the mai...
Under many circumstances, it might be adaptive for parents to bias the investment in offspring in re...
Sex roles describe sex differences in courtship, mate competition, social pair-bonds and parental ca...
The decision to provide parental care is often associated with trade-offs, because resources allocat...
Eberhart-Phillips L, Kuepper C, Carmona-Isunza MC, et al. Demographic causes of adult sex ratio vari...
In most taxa, females are more likely than males to care for offspring. Why? Ever since Trivers ’ la...
Theory predicts that parents adjust the sex ratio of their brood to the sexually selected traits of ...
1. A major component of sex-allocation theory, the Trivers-Willard Model (TWM), posits that sons and...
Sex roles describe sex differences in courtship, mate competition, social pair-bonds and parental ca...