Theory suggests that sex-specific selection can facilitate adaptation in sexually reproducing populations. However, sexual conflict theory and recent experiments indicate that sex-specific selection is potentially costly due to sexual antagonism: alleles harmful to one sex can accumulate within a population because they are favored in the other sex. Whether sex-specific selection provides a net fitness benefit or cost depends, in part, on the relative frequency and strength of sexually concordant versus sexually antagonistic selection throughout a species’ genome. Here, we model the net fitness consequences of sex-specific selection while explicitly considering both sexually concordant and sexually antagonistic selection. The model shows th...
Sexual conflict occurs when selection acts in opposing directions on males and females. Case studies...
SummaryWhether the changes brought about by sexual selection are, on the whole, congruent or incongr...
Sexual reproduction is a fundamental process that structures populations and modulates interactions ...
Sexual selection has manifold ecological and evolutionary consequences, making its net effect on pop...
Sexual selection is a prevalent evolutionary force that prominently led to the evolution of elaborat...
Males and females make equal genetic contributions to each generation, yet each sex is exposed to di...
Anisogamy is known to generate an important cost for sexual reproduction (the famous "twofold cost o...
Sexual selection is considered the major driver for the evolution of sex differences. However, the e...
Despite limitations on offspring production, almost all multicellular species use sex to reproduce. ...
Evolutionary conflicts of interest arise whenever genetically different individuals interact and the...
Evolutionary conflict permeates biological systems. In sexually reproducing organisms, sex-specific ...
Males and females share most of their genomes and express many of the same traits, yet the sexes oft...
Reproduction through sex carries substantial costs, mainly because only half of sexual adults produc...
Sexual selection can promote adaptation if sexually selected traits are reliable indicators of genet...
Sex-specific selection is widespread, evident by the evolution of sexual dimorphism in many traits i...
Sexual conflict occurs when selection acts in opposing directions on males and females. Case studies...
SummaryWhether the changes brought about by sexual selection are, on the whole, congruent or incongr...
Sexual reproduction is a fundamental process that structures populations and modulates interactions ...
Sexual selection has manifold ecological and evolutionary consequences, making its net effect on pop...
Sexual selection is a prevalent evolutionary force that prominently led to the evolution of elaborat...
Males and females make equal genetic contributions to each generation, yet each sex is exposed to di...
Anisogamy is known to generate an important cost for sexual reproduction (the famous "twofold cost o...
Sexual selection is considered the major driver for the evolution of sex differences. However, the e...
Despite limitations on offspring production, almost all multicellular species use sex to reproduce. ...
Evolutionary conflicts of interest arise whenever genetically different individuals interact and the...
Evolutionary conflict permeates biological systems. In sexually reproducing organisms, sex-specific ...
Males and females share most of their genomes and express many of the same traits, yet the sexes oft...
Reproduction through sex carries substantial costs, mainly because only half of sexual adults produc...
Sexual selection can promote adaptation if sexually selected traits are reliable indicators of genet...
Sex-specific selection is widespread, evident by the evolution of sexual dimorphism in many traits i...
Sexual conflict occurs when selection acts in opposing directions on males and females. Case studies...
SummaryWhether the changes brought about by sexual selection are, on the whole, congruent or incongr...
Sexual reproduction is a fundamental process that structures populations and modulates interactions ...