The Developmental Instability-Sexual Selection hypothesis was tested by examining ungulate horn and skeletal morphology. Comparative methods were employed to analyze patterning in asymmetry for eight species of the bovid subfamily Antilopinae. Traits were partitioned into craniofacial or horn groupings; unsigned asymmetries of traits were combined into composite FA indices representing developmental instability of craniofacial and horn modules, respectively. Although horns uniformly exhibited greater asymmetry than craniofacial traits, no evidence supporting subsequent predictions was found. Comparative and correlative analysis of phenotypic variation was performed to further investigate the specific deviations from expectation. The highly ...
Understanding the maintenance of the variation that is typically observed in natural populations has...
To understand sexual dimorphism as a morphological question, we must understand how it manifests, ho...
While all models of sexual selection assume that the development and expression of enlarged secondar...
We have researched the fluctuating asymmetry (FA) in the horn length of chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra...
The relationship between fluctuating asymmetry in horns of gemsbok (Oryx g. gazella) and a number of...
Researchers generally agree that the horns of male bovids are a product of sexual selection and are ...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Allometric relationships describe the proportional covariation between morphological, physiological,...
Allometric relationships describe the proportional covariation between morphological, physiological,...
The earliest known bovids, commonly placed in the genus Eotragus, are small species with short strai...
Understanding the maintenance of the variation that is typically observed in natural populations has...
To understand sexual dimorphism as a morphological question, we must understand how it manifests, ho...
While all models of sexual selection assume that the development and expression of enlarged secondar...
We have researched the fluctuating asymmetry (FA) in the horn length of chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra...
The relationship between fluctuating asymmetry in horns of gemsbok (Oryx g. gazella) and a number of...
Researchers generally agree that the horns of male bovids are a product of sexual selection and are ...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Question: Is sexual selection for the evolution of larger horns and related fighting structures oppo...
Allometric relationships describe the proportional covariation between morphological, physiological,...
Allometric relationships describe the proportional covariation between morphological, physiological,...
The earliest known bovids, commonly placed in the genus Eotragus, are small species with short strai...
Understanding the maintenance of the variation that is typically observed in natural populations has...
To understand sexual dimorphism as a morphological question, we must understand how it manifests, ho...
While all models of sexual selection assume that the development and expression of enlarged secondar...