Understanding the evolution of sexual ornaments, and particularly that of female sexual ornaments, is an enduring challenge in evolutionary biology. Key to this challenge are establishing the relationship between ornament expression and female reproductive investment, and determining the genetic basis underpinning such relationship. Advances in genomics provide unprecedented opportunities to study the genetic architecture of sexual ornaments in model species. Here, we present a quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis of a female sexual ornament, the comb of the fowl, Gallus gallus, using a large-scale intercross between red junglefowl and a domestic line, selected for egg production. First, we demonstrate that female somatic investment in c...
Elongated tail feathers and tail coverts of birds are used as a textbook example of exaggerated seco...
The study of male ornamentation has been fundamental to advancing the understanding of sexual select...
Sex differences in age-dependent mortality and reproductive success are predicted to drive the evolu...
How sexual selection affects the genome ultimately relies on the strength and type of selection, and...
Sexual selection and the ornaments that inform such choices have been extensively studied, particula...
Sexual selection was defined by Darwin in 1871 as selection acting solely on reproduction success. I...
Ornamentation, such as the showy plumage of birds, is widespread among female vertebrates, yet the e...
The phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis predicts that male sexual ornaments signal fertilizing eff...
Extravagant ornaments are thought to signal male quality to females choosing mates, but the evidence...
Although secondary sexual traits are commonly more developed in males than females, in many animal s...
Domestication is one of the strongest forms of short-term, directional selection. Although selection...
Onset of sexual maturation is a trait of extreme importance both evolutionarily and economically. Un...
Sex differences in age-dependent mortality and reproductive success are predicted to drive the evolu...
Onset of sexual maturation is a trait of extreme importance both evolutionarily and economically. Un...
Classical sexual selection theory provides a well-supported conceptual framework for understanding t...
Elongated tail feathers and tail coverts of birds are used as a textbook example of exaggerated seco...
The study of male ornamentation has been fundamental to advancing the understanding of sexual select...
Sex differences in age-dependent mortality and reproductive success are predicted to drive the evolu...
How sexual selection affects the genome ultimately relies on the strength and type of selection, and...
Sexual selection and the ornaments that inform such choices have been extensively studied, particula...
Sexual selection was defined by Darwin in 1871 as selection acting solely on reproduction success. I...
Ornamentation, such as the showy plumage of birds, is widespread among female vertebrates, yet the e...
The phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis predicts that male sexual ornaments signal fertilizing eff...
Extravagant ornaments are thought to signal male quality to females choosing mates, but the evidence...
Although secondary sexual traits are commonly more developed in males than females, in many animal s...
Domestication is one of the strongest forms of short-term, directional selection. Although selection...
Onset of sexual maturation is a trait of extreme importance both evolutionarily and economically. Un...
Sex differences in age-dependent mortality and reproductive success are predicted to drive the evolu...
Onset of sexual maturation is a trait of extreme importance both evolutionarily and economically. Un...
Classical sexual selection theory provides a well-supported conceptual framework for understanding t...
Elongated tail feathers and tail coverts of birds are used as a textbook example of exaggerated seco...
The study of male ornamentation has been fundamental to advancing the understanding of sexual select...
Sex differences in age-dependent mortality and reproductive success are predicted to drive the evolu...