Intralocus sexual conflict, which arises when the same trait has different fitness optima in males and females, reduces population growth rates. Recently, evolutionary biologists have recognized that intralocus conflict can occur between morphs or reproductive tactics within a sex and that intralocus tactical conflict might constrain tactical dimorphism and population growth rates just as intralocus sexual conflict constrains sexual dimorphism and population growth rates. However, research has only recently focused on sexual and tactical intralocus conflict simultaneously, and there is no formal theory connecting the two. We present a graphical model of how tactical and sexual conflict over the same trait could constrain both sexual and tac...
Males and females share many traits that have a common genetic basis; however, selection on these tr...
The spectacular variability that typically characterizes male genital traits has largely been attrib...
Males and females share a genome and express many shared phenotypic traits, which are often selected...
Intralocus sexual conflict, which arises when the same trait has different fitness optima in males a...
Alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs) have provided valuable insights into how sexual selection an...
Males and females share most of their genomes and express many of the same traits, yet the sexes oft...
Evolutionary conflict between the sexes can induce arms races in which males evolve traits that are ...
Alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs) have provided valuable insights into how sexual selection an...
ArticleResponses to sexually antagonistic selection are thought to be constrained by the shared gene...
SummarySexually antagonistic selection generates intralocus sexual conflict, an evolutionary tug-of-...
peer reviewedBoth inter-and intrasexual selection have been implicated in the origin and maintenance...
When selection differs between the sexes for traits that are genetically correlated between the sexe...
Intralocus sexual conflict arises when there are sex-specific optima for a trait that is expressed i...
Intralocus sexual conflict (IASC) arises when fitness optima for a shared trait differ between the s...
The spectacular variability that typically characterizes male genital traits has largely been attrib...
Males and females share many traits that have a common genetic basis; however, selection on these tr...
The spectacular variability that typically characterizes male genital traits has largely been attrib...
Males and females share a genome and express many shared phenotypic traits, which are often selected...
Intralocus sexual conflict, which arises when the same trait has different fitness optima in males a...
Alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs) have provided valuable insights into how sexual selection an...
Males and females share most of their genomes and express many of the same traits, yet the sexes oft...
Evolutionary conflict between the sexes can induce arms races in which males evolve traits that are ...
Alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs) have provided valuable insights into how sexual selection an...
ArticleResponses to sexually antagonistic selection are thought to be constrained by the shared gene...
SummarySexually antagonistic selection generates intralocus sexual conflict, an evolutionary tug-of-...
peer reviewedBoth inter-and intrasexual selection have been implicated in the origin and maintenance...
When selection differs between the sexes for traits that are genetically correlated between the sexe...
Intralocus sexual conflict arises when there are sex-specific optima for a trait that is expressed i...
Intralocus sexual conflict (IASC) arises when fitness optima for a shared trait differ between the s...
The spectacular variability that typically characterizes male genital traits has largely been attrib...
Males and females share many traits that have a common genetic basis; however, selection on these tr...
The spectacular variability that typically characterizes male genital traits has largely been attrib...
Males and females share a genome and express many shared phenotypic traits, which are often selected...