SummaryIn polygynous and polygynandrous species, there is often intense male-male competition over access to females, high male reproductive skew, and more male investment in mating effort than parenting effort [1]. However, the benefits derived from mating effort and parenting effort may change over the course of males’ lives. In many mammalian species, there is a ∩-shaped relationship between age, condition, and resource holding power as middle-aged males that are in prime physical condition outcompete older males [2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8] and sire more infants [9, 10, 11, 12]. Thus, males might derive more benefits from parenting effort than mating effort as they age and their competitive abilities decline [13]. Alternatively, older males ma...
| openaire: EC/H2020/295663/EU//RELNETThe distribution of group sizes in woodland baboons forms a pa...
baboon female intrasexual selection mate competition mortality paternal investment predation sex rat...
During male takeovers, in addition to fighting off the female's current mating partner, males may ex...
Long-term male–female bonds and bi-parental investment in offspring are hallmarks of human society. ...
Abstract Sexual selection theory predicts that males in po-lygynous species of mammals will invest m...
Recent studies revealing the limitations of the Priority of Access model suggest the evolutionary si...
Testosterone (T) is often positively associated with male sexual behavior and negatively associated ...
International audienceClose associations between adult males and lactating females occur in several ...
The paradigm of competitive males vying to influence female mate choice has been repeatedly upheld, ...
Female–female competition over paternal care has rarely been investigated in promiscuous mammals, wh...
Female–female competition over paternal care has rarely been investigated in promiscuous mammals, wh...
Aggression is ubiquitous, influencing reproduction through inter- and intraspecific effects in ways ...
In species that live in one-male groups, resident males monopolize access to a group of females and ...
We provide a quantitative test of the hypothesis that sex role specialisation may account for sex di...
Abstract Males in sexually dimorphic species like baboons appear to have surprisingly little influen...
| openaire: EC/H2020/295663/EU//RELNETThe distribution of group sizes in woodland baboons forms a pa...
baboon female intrasexual selection mate competition mortality paternal investment predation sex rat...
During male takeovers, in addition to fighting off the female's current mating partner, males may ex...
Long-term male–female bonds and bi-parental investment in offspring are hallmarks of human society. ...
Abstract Sexual selection theory predicts that males in po-lygynous species of mammals will invest m...
Recent studies revealing the limitations of the Priority of Access model suggest the evolutionary si...
Testosterone (T) is often positively associated with male sexual behavior and negatively associated ...
International audienceClose associations between adult males and lactating females occur in several ...
The paradigm of competitive males vying to influence female mate choice has been repeatedly upheld, ...
Female–female competition over paternal care has rarely been investigated in promiscuous mammals, wh...
Female–female competition over paternal care has rarely been investigated in promiscuous mammals, wh...
Aggression is ubiquitous, influencing reproduction through inter- and intraspecific effects in ways ...
In species that live in one-male groups, resident males monopolize access to a group of females and ...
We provide a quantitative test of the hypothesis that sex role specialisation may account for sex di...
Abstract Males in sexually dimorphic species like baboons appear to have surprisingly little influen...
| openaire: EC/H2020/295663/EU//RELNETThe distribution of group sizes in woodland baboons forms a pa...
baboon female intrasexual selection mate competition mortality paternal investment predation sex rat...
During male takeovers, in addition to fighting off the female's current mating partner, males may ex...