Evidence for sexual dimorphism is extremely limited in the non-avian dinosaurs despite their high diversity and disparity, and despite the fact that dimorphism is very common in vertebrate lineages of all kinds. Using body-size data from both Alligator mississippiensis and Rhea americana, which phylogenetically bracket the dinosaurs, we demonstrate that even when there is strong dimorphism in a species, random sampling of populations of individuals characterized by sustained periods of growth (as in the alligator and most dinosaurs) can result in the loss of this signal. Dimorphism may be common in fossil taxa but very hard to detect without ontogenetic age control and large sample sizes, both of which are hampered by the limitations of the...
Sexual selection often favors investment in expensive sexual traits that help individuals compete fo...
The clade Archosauria contains two very different sister groups in terms of diversity (number of spe...
Large-scale adaptive radiations might explain the runaway success of a minority of extant vertebrate...
Evidence for sexual dimorphism is extremely limited in the non-avian dinosaurs despite their high di...
The demonstration of sexual dimorphism in the fossil record can provide vital information about the ...
Sexual dimorphism is a prevalent feature of sexually reproducing organisms yet its presence in dinos...
Despite reports of sexual dimorphism in extinct taxa, such claims in non-avian dinosaurs have been u...
Fossil bone microanalyses reveal the ontogenetic histories of extinct tetrapods, but incomplete foss...
<div><p>It has been hypothesized that a high reproductive output contributes to the unique gigantism...
It has been hypothesized that a high reproductive output contributes to the unique gigantism in larg...
The evolutionary history of sexual selection in the geologic past is poorly documented based on quan...
The evolutionary history of sexual selection in the geologic past is poorly documented based on quan...
Sex determination systems are highly variable in vertebrates, although neither the causes nor the im...
Macroevolutionary patterns of sexual size dimorphism (SSD) indicate how sexual selection, natural se...
Hadrosaurid dinosaurs, the dominant large-bodied terrestrial herbivores in most Laurasian Late Creta...
Sexual selection often favors investment in expensive sexual traits that help individuals compete fo...
The clade Archosauria contains two very different sister groups in terms of diversity (number of spe...
Large-scale adaptive radiations might explain the runaway success of a minority of extant vertebrate...
Evidence for sexual dimorphism is extremely limited in the non-avian dinosaurs despite their high di...
The demonstration of sexual dimorphism in the fossil record can provide vital information about the ...
Sexual dimorphism is a prevalent feature of sexually reproducing organisms yet its presence in dinos...
Despite reports of sexual dimorphism in extinct taxa, such claims in non-avian dinosaurs have been u...
Fossil bone microanalyses reveal the ontogenetic histories of extinct tetrapods, but incomplete foss...
<div><p>It has been hypothesized that a high reproductive output contributes to the unique gigantism...
It has been hypothesized that a high reproductive output contributes to the unique gigantism in larg...
The evolutionary history of sexual selection in the geologic past is poorly documented based on quan...
The evolutionary history of sexual selection in the geologic past is poorly documented based on quan...
Sex determination systems are highly variable in vertebrates, although neither the causes nor the im...
Macroevolutionary patterns of sexual size dimorphism (SSD) indicate how sexual selection, natural se...
Hadrosaurid dinosaurs, the dominant large-bodied terrestrial herbivores in most Laurasian Late Creta...
Sexual selection often favors investment in expensive sexual traits that help individuals compete fo...
The clade Archosauria contains two very different sister groups in terms of diversity (number of spe...
Large-scale adaptive radiations might explain the runaway success of a minority of extant vertebrate...