The sexy-sperm hypothesis posits that polyandrous females derive an indirect fitness benefit from multi-male mating because they increase the probability their eggs are fertilized by males whose sperm have high fertilizing efficiency, which is assumed to be heritable and conferred on their sons. However, whether this process occurs is contentious because father-to-son heritability may be constrained by the genetic architecture underlying traits important in sperm competition within certain species. Previous empirical work has revealed such genetic constraints in the seed beetle, Callosobruchus maculatus, a model system in sperm competition studies in which female multi-male mating is ubiquitous. Using the seed beetle, I tested a critical pr...
The evolution of male traits that inflict direct harm on females during mating interactions can resu...
Theory predicts that sexual reproduction can increase population viability relative to asexual repro...
A major unsolved question in evolutionary biology concerns the relationship between natural and sexu...
The sexy-sperm hypothesis posits that polyandrous females derive an indirect fitness benefit from mu...
Given the costs of multiple-mating, why has female polyandry evolved? Utetheisa ornatrix moths are w...
Male animals often show higher mutation rates than their female conspecifics. A hypothesis for this ...
When males provide females with resources at mating they can become the limiting sex in reproduction...
After choosing a first mate, polyandrous females have access to a range of opportunities to bias pat...
Multiple mating by females (polyandry) requires an evolutionary explanation, because it carries fitn...
Between-individual variance in potential reproductive rate theoretically creates a load in reproduci...
When females mate with multiple males, they set the stage for post-copulatory sexual selection via s...
There is an evolutionary trade-off between the resources that a species invests in dispersal versus ...
The widespread phenomenon of polyandry (mating by females with multiple males) is an evolutionary pu...
In naturally polygamous organisms such as Drosophila, sperm competitive ability is one of the most i...
The evolution of male traits that inflict direct harm on females during mating interactions can resu...
Theory predicts that sexual reproduction can increase population viability relative to asexual repro...
A major unsolved question in evolutionary biology concerns the relationship between natural and sexu...
The sexy-sperm hypothesis posits that polyandrous females derive an indirect fitness benefit from mu...
Given the costs of multiple-mating, why has female polyandry evolved? Utetheisa ornatrix moths are w...
Male animals often show higher mutation rates than their female conspecifics. A hypothesis for this ...
When males provide females with resources at mating they can become the limiting sex in reproduction...
After choosing a first mate, polyandrous females have access to a range of opportunities to bias pat...
Multiple mating by females (polyandry) requires an evolutionary explanation, because it carries fitn...
Between-individual variance in potential reproductive rate theoretically creates a load in reproduci...
When females mate with multiple males, they set the stage for post-copulatory sexual selection via s...
There is an evolutionary trade-off between the resources that a species invests in dispersal versus ...
The widespread phenomenon of polyandry (mating by females with multiple males) is an evolutionary pu...
In naturally polygamous organisms such as Drosophila, sperm competitive ability is one of the most i...
The evolution of male traits that inflict direct harm on females during mating interactions can resu...
Theory predicts that sexual reproduction can increase population viability relative to asexual repro...
A major unsolved question in evolutionary biology concerns the relationship between natural and sexu...