Dominant mammalian males should gain a reproductive advantage due to their greater fighting abilities. However, the extent to which they can monopolise access to females varies across species. In primates and recently other mammalian species, the Priority of Access (PoA) model is commonly used to measure the degree to which male rank and female receptive synchrony affect mating skew. Few studies have examined the factors which lead to deviations from the expectations of the model. Here, we investigate male mating skew in wild Barbary macaques (Macaca sylvanus). We examined four of the main factors which affect male mating success: the roles of male rank, female receptive synchrony, coalitionary activity and female behaviour. We found that m...
In primates, males compete for a mate, which is a non-sharable resource. This makes the conditions l...
Female mate choice, a potentially powerful selective force, has received little systematic attention...
Sexual selection theory predicts that because male reproductive success in mammals is limited by acc...
Dominant mammalian males should gain a reproductive advantage due to their greater fighting abilitie...
In group-living animals, males’ fighting abilities were usually mediated via dominance rank to sort ...
A fundamental question of sexual selection theory concerns the causes and consequences of reproducti...
© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Among primate species living in multimale-multifemale groups, the num...
© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Among primate species living in multimale-multifemale groups, the num...
The priority-of-access (POA) model posits that high dominance rank increases male mating success by ...
In mammals, when females are clumped in space, male access to receptive females is usually determine...
In group living animals, especially among primates, there is consistent evidence that high-ranking m...
One of the basic principles of sexual selection is that male reproductive success should be skewed t...
Dominance rank often determines the share of reproduction an individual male can secure in group-liv...
High social status is the primary determinant of reproductive success among group-living male mammal...
Sexual selection theory predicts that because male reproductive success in mammals is limited by acc...
In primates, males compete for a mate, which is a non-sharable resource. This makes the conditions l...
Female mate choice, a potentially powerful selective force, has received little systematic attention...
Sexual selection theory predicts that because male reproductive success in mammals is limited by acc...
Dominant mammalian males should gain a reproductive advantage due to their greater fighting abilitie...
In group-living animals, males’ fighting abilities were usually mediated via dominance rank to sort ...
A fundamental question of sexual selection theory concerns the causes and consequences of reproducti...
© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Among primate species living in multimale-multifemale groups, the num...
© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Among primate species living in multimale-multifemale groups, the num...
The priority-of-access (POA) model posits that high dominance rank increases male mating success by ...
In mammals, when females are clumped in space, male access to receptive females is usually determine...
In group living animals, especially among primates, there is consistent evidence that high-ranking m...
One of the basic principles of sexual selection is that male reproductive success should be skewed t...
Dominance rank often determines the share of reproduction an individual male can secure in group-liv...
High social status is the primary determinant of reproductive success among group-living male mammal...
Sexual selection theory predicts that because male reproductive success in mammals is limited by acc...
In primates, males compete for a mate, which is a non-sharable resource. This makes the conditions l...
Female mate choice, a potentially powerful selective force, has received little systematic attention...
Sexual selection theory predicts that because male reproductive success in mammals is limited by acc...