Sex-biased dispersal is a much-discussed feature in literature on dispersal. Diverse hypotheses have been proposed to explain the evolution of sex-biased dispersal, a difference in dispersal rate or dispersal distance between males and females. An early hypothesis has indicated that it may rely on the difference in sex chromosomes between males and females. However, this proposal was quickly rejected without a real assessment. We propose a new perspective on this hypothesis by investigating the evolution of sex-biased dispersal when dispersal genes are sex-linked, i.e. when they are located on the sex chromosomes. We show that individuals of the heterogametic sex disperse relatively more than do individuals of the homogametic sex when dispe...
Dispersal syndromes (i.e. suites of phenotypic correlates of dispersal) are potentially important de...
Dispersal influences a variety of ecological and evolutionary dynamics including metapopulation pers...
Dispersal syndromes (i.e. suites of phenotypic correlates of dispersal) are potentially important de...
Sex-biased dispersal is a much-discussed feature in literature on dispersal. Diverse hypotheses have...
International audienceDispersal is central in ecology and evolution because it influences population...
Sex-biased dispersal is an almost ubiquitous feature of mammalian life history, but the evolutionary...
Sex-biased natal dispersal is widespread, and its significance remains a central question in evoluti...
International audienceThe relation between mating system and sex-biased dispersal has been debated f...
Sex-specific dispersal behavior has been documented in a wide range of different species. Avoidance ...
We investigate the co-evolutionary relationship between sex-ratio bias and sex-specific dispersal be...
Understanding why dispersal is sex-biased in many taxa is still a major concern in evolu-tionary eco...
Sex-biased dispersal is expected to generate differences in the fine-scale genetic structure of male...
Although dispersal requires context-dependent decision-making in three distinct stages (emigration, ...
Population viscosity has been proposed as an important mechanism for the evolution of cooperation. T...
Population viscosity has been proposed as an important mechanism for the evolution of cooperation. T...
Dispersal syndromes (i.e. suites of phenotypic correlates of dispersal) are potentially important de...
Dispersal influences a variety of ecological and evolutionary dynamics including metapopulation pers...
Dispersal syndromes (i.e. suites of phenotypic correlates of dispersal) are potentially important de...
Sex-biased dispersal is a much-discussed feature in literature on dispersal. Diverse hypotheses have...
International audienceDispersal is central in ecology and evolution because it influences population...
Sex-biased dispersal is an almost ubiquitous feature of mammalian life history, but the evolutionary...
Sex-biased natal dispersal is widespread, and its significance remains a central question in evoluti...
International audienceThe relation between mating system and sex-biased dispersal has been debated f...
Sex-specific dispersal behavior has been documented in a wide range of different species. Avoidance ...
We investigate the co-evolutionary relationship between sex-ratio bias and sex-specific dispersal be...
Understanding why dispersal is sex-biased in many taxa is still a major concern in evolu-tionary eco...
Sex-biased dispersal is expected to generate differences in the fine-scale genetic structure of male...
Although dispersal requires context-dependent decision-making in three distinct stages (emigration, ...
Population viscosity has been proposed as an important mechanism for the evolution of cooperation. T...
Population viscosity has been proposed as an important mechanism for the evolution of cooperation. T...
Dispersal syndromes (i.e. suites of phenotypic correlates of dispersal) are potentially important de...
Dispersal influences a variety of ecological and evolutionary dynamics including metapopulation pers...
Dispersal syndromes (i.e. suites of phenotypic correlates of dispersal) are potentially important de...