Cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) play an essential role in mate recognition in insects but the form and intensity of sexual selection on CHCs has only been evaluated in a handful of studies, and never in a natural population. We quantified sexual selection operating on CHCs in a wild population of sagebrush crickets, a species in which nuptial feeding by females imposes an unambiguous phenotypic marker on males. Multivariate selection analysis revealed a saddle-shaped fitness surface, suggesting a complex interplay between the total abundance of CHCs and specific CHC combinations in their influence on female choice. The fitness surface resulting from two axes of disruptive selection reflected a trade-off between short- and long-chained CHCs, s...
Phenotypic traits that convey information about individual identity or quality are important in anim...
Data relating to Tyler F, Fisher D, d’Ettorre P, Rodríguez-Muñoz R, Tregenza T (2015). Chemical cues...
Debates about how coevolution of sexual traits and preferences might promote evolutionary diversific...
Cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) play an essential role in mate recognition in insects but the form and...
The role of cuticular hydrocarbons in sexual displays has received considerable interest over the la...
Indirect genetic benefits derived from female mate choice comprise additive (good genes) and non-add...
Although many theoretical models of male sexual trait evolution assume that sexual selection is coun...
Male choosiness of prospective female mating partners provides an increasingly recognised pathway th...
A role for sexual selection in the evolution of insect cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) is suggested by...
The often complex cocktails of hydrocarbon compounds found on the cuticles of insects can serve both...
While the reproductive benefits of sexual displays have been widely studied, we have relatively limi...
The relationship between sexual and viability selection in females is necessarily different than tha...
Indirect genetic benefits derived from female mate choice comprise additive (good genes) and nonaddi...
Female choice based on male secondary sexual traits is well documented, although the extent to which...
While a number of studies have measured multivariate sexual selection acting on sexual signals in wi...
Phenotypic traits that convey information about individual identity or quality are important in anim...
Data relating to Tyler F, Fisher D, d’Ettorre P, Rodríguez-Muñoz R, Tregenza T (2015). Chemical cues...
Debates about how coevolution of sexual traits and preferences might promote evolutionary diversific...
Cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) play an essential role in mate recognition in insects but the form and...
The role of cuticular hydrocarbons in sexual displays has received considerable interest over the la...
Indirect genetic benefits derived from female mate choice comprise additive (good genes) and non-add...
Although many theoretical models of male sexual trait evolution assume that sexual selection is coun...
Male choosiness of prospective female mating partners provides an increasingly recognised pathway th...
A role for sexual selection in the evolution of insect cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) is suggested by...
The often complex cocktails of hydrocarbon compounds found on the cuticles of insects can serve both...
While the reproductive benefits of sexual displays have been widely studied, we have relatively limi...
The relationship between sexual and viability selection in females is necessarily different than tha...
Indirect genetic benefits derived from female mate choice comprise additive (good genes) and nonaddi...
Female choice based on male secondary sexual traits is well documented, although the extent to which...
While a number of studies have measured multivariate sexual selection acting on sexual signals in wi...
Phenotypic traits that convey information about individual identity or quality are important in anim...
Data relating to Tyler F, Fisher D, d’Ettorre P, Rodríguez-Muñoz R, Tregenza T (2015). Chemical cues...
Debates about how coevolution of sexual traits and preferences might promote evolutionary diversific...