Female poeciliid fishes of the sister genera Xiphophorus and Priapella share a preference for males with swords, despite phylogenetic information suggesting that swords arose in Xiphophorus after the divergence of the two genera. This study examines the strength of sword and body-size preferences in a representative of both genera. A comparison of the preference functions reveals that the strength of the preference favoring a sword in P. olmecae is significantly stronger than that in X. helleri. This result demonstrates that the pre-existing bias is not evolutionarily fixed, and that there has been change in the bias favoring the sword, in either the Priapella lineage, or the Xiphophorus lineage, or in both. Although females in both species...
In male swordtails (Xiphophorus nigrensis) there are three size classes that derive from allelic var...
The evolution of complex signals via sexual selection is becoming a primary focus in mate choice stu...
AbstractThe evolution and the adaptive logic (if any) of female mate choice are subjects of lively d...
Female poeciliid fishes of the sister genera Xiphophorus and Priapella share a preference for males ...
Female poeciliid ¢shes of the sister genera Xiphophorus and Priapella share a preference for males w...
Robust phylogenetic information can be instrumental to the study of the evolution of female mating p...
Robust phylogenetic information can be instrumental to the study of the evolution of female mating p...
Swordtail fish (Poeciliidae: genus Xiphophorus) are a paradigmatic case of sexual selection by senso...
Abstract. Models of sexual selection have recently been broadened to include the pre-existing bias m...
Abstract. Models of sexual selection have recently been broadened to include the pre-existing bias m...
Swordtail fish (Poeciliidae: genus Xiphophorus) are a paradigmatic case of sexual selection by senso...
Sexual rather than natural selection can account for the evolution of exaggerated male ornaments tha...
In many animals, phenotypic diversity in males originates through sexual selection. However, the evo...
Sexually dimorphic traits in many mate recognition systems have evolved in response to preexisting f...
Sexually dimorphic traits in many mate recognition systems have evolved in response to preexisting f...
In male swordtails (Xiphophorus nigrensis) there are three size classes that derive from allelic var...
The evolution of complex signals via sexual selection is becoming a primary focus in mate choice stu...
AbstractThe evolution and the adaptive logic (if any) of female mate choice are subjects of lively d...
Female poeciliid fishes of the sister genera Xiphophorus and Priapella share a preference for males ...
Female poeciliid ¢shes of the sister genera Xiphophorus and Priapella share a preference for males w...
Robust phylogenetic information can be instrumental to the study of the evolution of female mating p...
Robust phylogenetic information can be instrumental to the study of the evolution of female mating p...
Swordtail fish (Poeciliidae: genus Xiphophorus) are a paradigmatic case of sexual selection by senso...
Abstract. Models of sexual selection have recently been broadened to include the pre-existing bias m...
Abstract. Models of sexual selection have recently been broadened to include the pre-existing bias m...
Swordtail fish (Poeciliidae: genus Xiphophorus) are a paradigmatic case of sexual selection by senso...
Sexual rather than natural selection can account for the evolution of exaggerated male ornaments tha...
In many animals, phenotypic diversity in males originates through sexual selection. However, the evo...
Sexually dimorphic traits in many mate recognition systems have evolved in response to preexisting f...
Sexually dimorphic traits in many mate recognition systems have evolved in response to preexisting f...
In male swordtails (Xiphophorus nigrensis) there are three size classes that derive from allelic var...
The evolution of complex signals via sexual selection is becoming a primary focus in mate choice stu...
AbstractThe evolution and the adaptive logic (if any) of female mate choice are subjects of lively d...