After choosing a first mate, polyandrous females have access to a range of opportunities to bias paternity, such as repeating matings with the preferred male, facilitating fertilization from the best sperm or differentially investing in offspring according to their sire. Female ability to bias paternity after a first mating has been demonstrated in a few species, but unambiguous evidence remains limited by the access to complex behaviours, sperm storage organs and fertilization processes within females. Even when found at the phenotypic level, the potential evolution of any mechanism allowing females to bias paternity other than mate choice remains little explored. Using a large population of pedigreed females, we developed a simple test to...
Female mate choice is a complex decision-making process that involves many context-dependent factors...
The sexy-sperm hypothesis posits that polyandrous females derive an indirect fitness benefit from mu...
How males and females contribute to joint reproductive success has been a long-standing question in ...
After choosing a first mate, polyandrous females have access to a range of opportunities to bias pat...
After choosing a first mate, polyandrous females have access to a range of opportunities to bias pat...
Infertility is common in nature despite its obvious cost to individual fitness. Rising global temper...
Despite heritable variation for univariate sexually selected traits, recent analyses exploring multi...
Mate preferences are abundant throughout the animal kingdom with female preferences receiving the mo...
Polyandry is widespread despite its costs. The sexually selected sperm hypotheses (‘sexy’ and ‘good’...
What drives mating system variation is a major question in evolutionary biology. Female multiple mat...
Many species engage in polyandry, resulting in the potential for sexual selection to continue post-c...
Given the costs of multiple-mating, why has female polyandry evolved? Utetheisa ornatrix moths are w...
Male fitness is dependent on sexual traits that influence mate acquisition (pre-copulatory sexual se...
Drosophila melanogaster females commonly mate with multiple males establishing the opportunity for p...
Mate choice and mate competition can both influence the evolution of sexual isolation between popula...
Female mate choice is a complex decision-making process that involves many context-dependent factors...
The sexy-sperm hypothesis posits that polyandrous females derive an indirect fitness benefit from mu...
How males and females contribute to joint reproductive success has been a long-standing question in ...
After choosing a first mate, polyandrous females have access to a range of opportunities to bias pat...
After choosing a first mate, polyandrous females have access to a range of opportunities to bias pat...
Infertility is common in nature despite its obvious cost to individual fitness. Rising global temper...
Despite heritable variation for univariate sexually selected traits, recent analyses exploring multi...
Mate preferences are abundant throughout the animal kingdom with female preferences receiving the mo...
Polyandry is widespread despite its costs. The sexually selected sperm hypotheses (‘sexy’ and ‘good’...
What drives mating system variation is a major question in evolutionary biology. Female multiple mat...
Many species engage in polyandry, resulting in the potential for sexual selection to continue post-c...
Given the costs of multiple-mating, why has female polyandry evolved? Utetheisa ornatrix moths are w...
Male fitness is dependent on sexual traits that influence mate acquisition (pre-copulatory sexual se...
Drosophila melanogaster females commonly mate with multiple males establishing the opportunity for p...
Mate choice and mate competition can both influence the evolution of sexual isolation between popula...
Female mate choice is a complex decision-making process that involves many context-dependent factors...
The sexy-sperm hypothesis posits that polyandrous females derive an indirect fitness benefit from mu...
How males and females contribute to joint reproductive success has been a long-standing question in ...