Female seaweed flies, Coelopa frigida, have the potential to benefit from mating more than once. Single matings result in low fertility so females may benefit directly from multiple copulations by sperm replenishment. A chromosomal inversion associated with larval fitness, with heterokaryotypic larvae having higher viability than homokaryotypes, means that polyandrous homokaryotypic females have a higher probability of producing genetically fit offspring than monandrous homokaryotypic females. We allowed females to mate only once, repeatedly four times to the same male, or polyandrously four times to four different males. Multiply mated and polyandrous females laid more eggs and produced more offspring than singly mated and monandrous femal...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...
Measuring individual variation in mating behaviour is an integral part of studies of sexual selectio...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...
Female seaweed flies, Coelopa frigida, have the potential to benefit from mating more than once. Sin...
Female seaweed flies, Coelopa frigida, have the potential to benefit from mating more than once. Sin...
Multiple mating by females is common in many insects. However, there is still considerable debate as...
Polyandry, female mating with multiple males, is widespread across many taxa and almost ubiquitous i...
Multiple mating by female insects is widespread, and the explanation(s) for repeated mating by femal...
In the stalk-eyed fly, Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni, male eyespan is under sexual selection. This species h...
The adaptive significance of female polyandry has become a recurrent subject of recent theoretical a...
Why females of many species mate multiply in the absence of direct benefits remains an open question...
Multiple mating by female insects is widespread, and the explanation(s) for repeated mating by femal...
Polyandry is a paradox: why do females mate multiple times when a single ejaculate often provides en...
Females of the stalk-eyed fly, Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni, mate repeatedly during their lifetime and exhi...
Why females of many species mate multiply in the absence of direct benefits remains an open question...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...
Measuring individual variation in mating behaviour is an integral part of studies of sexual selectio...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...
Female seaweed flies, Coelopa frigida, have the potential to benefit from mating more than once. Sin...
Female seaweed flies, Coelopa frigida, have the potential to benefit from mating more than once. Sin...
Multiple mating by females is common in many insects. However, there is still considerable debate as...
Polyandry, female mating with multiple males, is widespread across many taxa and almost ubiquitous i...
Multiple mating by female insects is widespread, and the explanation(s) for repeated mating by femal...
In the stalk-eyed fly, Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni, male eyespan is under sexual selection. This species h...
The adaptive significance of female polyandry has become a recurrent subject of recent theoretical a...
Why females of many species mate multiply in the absence of direct benefits remains an open question...
Multiple mating by female insects is widespread, and the explanation(s) for repeated mating by femal...
Polyandry is a paradox: why do females mate multiple times when a single ejaculate often provides en...
Females of the stalk-eyed fly, Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni, mate repeatedly during their lifetime and exhi...
Why females of many species mate multiply in the absence of direct benefits remains an open question...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...
Measuring individual variation in mating behaviour is an integral part of studies of sexual selectio...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...