Aggressive behaviours are among the most striking displayed by animals, and aggression strongly impacts fitness in many species. Aggression varies plastically in response to the social environment, but we lack direct tests of how aggression evolves in response to intra-sexual competition. We investigated how aggression in both sexes evolves in response to the competitive environment, using populations of Drosophila melanogaster that we experimentally evolved under female-biased, equal, and male-biased sex ratios. We found that after evolution in a female-biased environment—with less male competition for mates—males fought less often on food patches, although the total frequency and duration of aggressive behaviour did not change. In females...
Artificial selection and experimental evolution document natural selection under controlled conditio...
Harmony and cooperation was for long believed to dominate sexual interactions. This view slowly star...
A number of studies have documented the evolution of female resistance to mate harm in response to t...
Across the animal kingdom, competition for reproductive resources often results in intra-sexual aggr...
Aggression between individuals of the same sex is almost ubiquitous across the animal kingdom. Winne...
Aggression between individuals of the same sex is almost ubiquitous across the animal kingdom. Winne...
Competition among individuals for access to resources crucial for survival and reproduction is ubiqu...
Abstract Mating changes female behaviour and physiology across a wide range of taxa, with importan...
Female mate choice is a complex decision making process that involves many context-dependent factors...
Competition for mates can be a major source of selection, not just on secondary sexual traits but ac...
The interests of males and females over reproduction rarely coincide and conflicts between the sexes...
Phenotypic plasticity is a key mechanism by which animals can cope with rapidly changeable environme...
Background Intralocus sexual conflict can inhibit the evolution of each sex towards its own fitne...
BACKGROUND: Intralocus sexual conflict can inhibit the evolution of each sex towards its own fitness...
1. Competition over access to resources early in life can influence development, and, in turn, affec...
Artificial selection and experimental evolution document natural selection under controlled conditio...
Harmony and cooperation was for long believed to dominate sexual interactions. This view slowly star...
A number of studies have documented the evolution of female resistance to mate harm in response to t...
Across the animal kingdom, competition for reproductive resources often results in intra-sexual aggr...
Aggression between individuals of the same sex is almost ubiquitous across the animal kingdom. Winne...
Aggression between individuals of the same sex is almost ubiquitous across the animal kingdom. Winne...
Competition among individuals for access to resources crucial for survival and reproduction is ubiqu...
Abstract Mating changes female behaviour and physiology across a wide range of taxa, with importan...
Female mate choice is a complex decision making process that involves many context-dependent factors...
Competition for mates can be a major source of selection, not just on secondary sexual traits but ac...
The interests of males and females over reproduction rarely coincide and conflicts between the sexes...
Phenotypic plasticity is a key mechanism by which animals can cope with rapidly changeable environme...
Background Intralocus sexual conflict can inhibit the evolution of each sex towards its own fitne...
BACKGROUND: Intralocus sexual conflict can inhibit the evolution of each sex towards its own fitness...
1. Competition over access to resources early in life can influence development, and, in turn, affec...
Artificial selection and experimental evolution document natural selection under controlled conditio...
Harmony and cooperation was for long believed to dominate sexual interactions. This view slowly star...
A number of studies have documented the evolution of female resistance to mate harm in response to t...