In polyandrous species males invest significant resources in producing large and high-quality ejaculates. As ejaculates are costly, males are expected to modulate their investment in response to social cues associated with the expected level of sperm competition or mating opportunity, to anticipate future mating conditions. Another consequence of ejaculate costs is that the increase in ejaculate production may be traded against traits linked to mate acquisition. In such cases, the effect of this anticipatory plasticity in ejaculate investment on a male's reproductive success will depend on the balance between postcopulatory benefits and precopulatory costs in the sociosexual context subsequently encountered. Here, we used the guppy, Poecili...
In polyandrous species, females may influence paternity by biasing sperm usage in favour of particul...
Female sperm storage (FSS) is taxonomically widespread and often associated with intense sperm compe...
Sperm competition risk (SCR) models predict that if there is a low probability a male’s ejaculate wi...
Males pay considerable reproductive costs in acquiring mates (precopulatory sexual selection) and in...
Males of many species evolved the capability of adjusting their ejaculate phenotype in response to s...
In many species, males show anticipatory plasticity for sperm production, which they adjust to match...
As sperm production is costly, males are expected to strategically allocate resources to sperm produ...
Sexual selection can operate both before and after mating. For males, selection will favor a suite o...
Males are generally expected to be discriminating in their choice of mates when females vary in qual...
Previous work (Reynolds & Gross 1992) has demonstrated that mate choice enables female guppies, ...
The phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis (PLFH) predicts that males with elaborated sexual ornament...
When females mate multiply, male reproductive success depends on both pre- and postcopulatory proces...
As inbreeding is costly, it has been suggested that polyandry may evolve as a means to reduce the ne...
Abstract: In species in which individuals alternate between mating strategies, males may respond to ...
A growing number of studies highlight the nontransitive properties of ejaculates when they are in co...
In polyandrous species, females may influence paternity by biasing sperm usage in favour of particul...
Female sperm storage (FSS) is taxonomically widespread and often associated with intense sperm compe...
Sperm competition risk (SCR) models predict that if there is a low probability a male’s ejaculate wi...
Males pay considerable reproductive costs in acquiring mates (precopulatory sexual selection) and in...
Males of many species evolved the capability of adjusting their ejaculate phenotype in response to s...
In many species, males show anticipatory plasticity for sperm production, which they adjust to match...
As sperm production is costly, males are expected to strategically allocate resources to sperm produ...
Sexual selection can operate both before and after mating. For males, selection will favor a suite o...
Males are generally expected to be discriminating in their choice of mates when females vary in qual...
Previous work (Reynolds & Gross 1992) has demonstrated that mate choice enables female guppies, ...
The phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis (PLFH) predicts that males with elaborated sexual ornament...
When females mate multiply, male reproductive success depends on both pre- and postcopulatory proces...
As inbreeding is costly, it has been suggested that polyandry may evolve as a means to reduce the ne...
Abstract: In species in which individuals alternate between mating strategies, males may respond to ...
A growing number of studies highlight the nontransitive properties of ejaculates when they are in co...
In polyandrous species, females may influence paternity by biasing sperm usage in favour of particul...
Female sperm storage (FSS) is taxonomically widespread and often associated with intense sperm compe...
Sperm competition risk (SCR) models predict that if there is a low probability a male’s ejaculate wi...