When the relative fitness of male and female offspring varies with environmental conditions, evolutionary theory predicts that parents should adjust the sex of their offspring accordingly. Qualitative and even quantitative support for this prediction is striking in some taxa but much less convincing in others. Explaining such variation across taxa in the fit of sex ratio theory remains a major challenge. We use meta-analysis to test the role of two constraints in the evolution of sex ratios. Based on analysis of sex ratio skews in birds and wasps, we show that (i) mechanisms of sex determination do not necessarily constrain the evolution of sex ratio adjustment, and (ii) parental ability to predict their offsprings' environment influences t...
Under many circumstances, it might be adaptive for parents to bias the investment in offspring in re...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
When the relative fitness of sons and daughters differs, sex-allocation theory predicts that it woul...
When the relative fitness of male and female offspring varies with environmental conditions, evoluti...
When the relative Þtness of male and female offspring varies with environ-mental conditions, evoluti...
When the relative fitness of mate and female offspring varies with environmental conditions, evoluti...
Abstract In a number of bird species, the sex ratio of the broods is not random, instead it is re-la...
Studies of sex allocation offer excellent opportunities for examining the constraints and limits on ...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
Studies of sex allocation offer excellent opportunities for examining the constraints and limits on ...
Theory predicts that parents adjust the sex ratio of their brood to the sexually selected traits of ...
AbstractMany species adaptively alter offspring sex ratios, yet little is known about how they obtai...
Many species adaptively alter offspring sex ratios, yet little is known about how they obtain releva...
Sex ratio theory attempts to explain variation at all levels (species, population, individual, broo...
Under many circumstances, it might be adaptive for parents to bias the investment in offspring in re...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
When the relative fitness of sons and daughters differs, sex-allocation theory predicts that it woul...
When the relative fitness of male and female offspring varies with environmental conditions, evoluti...
When the relative Þtness of male and female offspring varies with environ-mental conditions, evoluti...
When the relative fitness of mate and female offspring varies with environmental conditions, evoluti...
Abstract In a number of bird species, the sex ratio of the broods is not random, instead it is re-la...
Studies of sex allocation offer excellent opportunities for examining the constraints and limits on ...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
Studies of sex allocation offer excellent opportunities for examining the constraints and limits on ...
Theory predicts that parents adjust the sex ratio of their brood to the sexually selected traits of ...
AbstractMany species adaptively alter offspring sex ratios, yet little is known about how they obtai...
Many species adaptively alter offspring sex ratios, yet little is known about how they obtain releva...
Sex ratio theory attempts to explain variation at all levels (species, population, individual, broo...
Under many circumstances, it might be adaptive for parents to bias the investment in offspring in re...
Despite decades of research, whether vertebrates can and do adaptively adjust the sex ratio of their...
When the relative fitness of sons and daughters differs, sex-allocation theory predicts that it woul...