Recent theory predicts that males should choose social environments that maximize their relative attractiveness to females by preferentially associating with less attractive rivals, so as to enhance their mating success. Using the Trinidadian guppy (Poecilia reticulata), a highly social species, we tested for non-random social associations among males in mixed-sex groups based on two phenotypic traits (body length and coloration) that predict relative sexual attractiveness to females and sexual (sperm) competitiveness. Based on a well-replicated laboratory dichotomous-choice test of social group preference, we could not reject the null hypothesis that focal males chose randomly between a mixed-sex group that comprised a female and a rival m...
To test the relative importance of female choice, sneak copulation and male dominance as determinant...
The spectacular variability that typically characterizes male genital traits has largely been attrib...
Selection for increased fitness often results in changes to an organism’s behavioural repertoire, an...
Recent theory predicts that males should choose social environments that maximize their relative att...
Recent theory predicts that in species where females tend to mate with the relatively most ornamente...
Reproduction is by its very nature a social interaction, and should therefore be considered in a soc...
Although mate choice by males does occur in nature, our understanding of its importance in driving e...
Recent theory predicts that in species where females tend to mate with the relatively most ornamente...
peer reviewedBoth inter-and intrasexual selection have been implicated in the origin and maintenance...
1. Responding to the information provided by others is an important foraging strategy in many specie...
The spectacular variability that typically characterizes male genital traits has largely been attrib...
In populations with male mate-choice copying, males may mitigate their risk of sexual competition by...
Mate choice by males in organisms that do not make obviously costly contributions to offspring shoul...
1. Responding to the information provided by others is an important foraging strategy in many specie...
Social organization is often studied through point estimates of individual association or interactio...
To test the relative importance of female choice, sneak copulation and male dominance as determinant...
The spectacular variability that typically characterizes male genital traits has largely been attrib...
Selection for increased fitness often results in changes to an organism’s behavioural repertoire, an...
Recent theory predicts that males should choose social environments that maximize their relative att...
Recent theory predicts that in species where females tend to mate with the relatively most ornamente...
Reproduction is by its very nature a social interaction, and should therefore be considered in a soc...
Although mate choice by males does occur in nature, our understanding of its importance in driving e...
Recent theory predicts that in species where females tend to mate with the relatively most ornamente...
peer reviewedBoth inter-and intrasexual selection have been implicated in the origin and maintenance...
1. Responding to the information provided by others is an important foraging strategy in many specie...
The spectacular variability that typically characterizes male genital traits has largely been attrib...
In populations with male mate-choice copying, males may mitigate their risk of sexual competition by...
Mate choice by males in organisms that do not make obviously costly contributions to offspring shoul...
1. Responding to the information provided by others is an important foraging strategy in many specie...
Social organization is often studied through point estimates of individual association or interactio...
To test the relative importance of female choice, sneak copulation and male dominance as determinant...
The spectacular variability that typically characterizes male genital traits has largely been attrib...
Selection for increased fitness often results in changes to an organism’s behavioural repertoire, an...