Sexual selection can drive the evolution of exaggerated ornaments and armaments, which serve no purpose to survival but are beneficial for mate choice or intrasexual competition. Sexual selection theory was based on elaborate sexual traits displayed by males, with the expectation that males invest less in gametes, as sperm is less costly than eggs, and thus freeing up males to invest in sexually selected traits. Despite several taxa expressing female ornaments, there have been underlying assumptions that ornaments will have drastic fitness costs for females as a result of trade-offs with fecundity. This raises the question of whether female ornaments can evolve through sexual selection, and act as honest signals during mate choice or evolvi...
Swordtail fish (Poeciliidae: genus Xiphophorus) are a paradigmatic case of sexual selection by senso...
Observations of male mate choice are increasingly common, even in species with traditional sex roles...
not explain why their expression varies so much across lineages. We argue that coercion-avoidance ca...
Sexual ornaments found only in females are a rare occurrence in nature. One explanation for this is ...
Sexual ornaments found only in females are a rare occurrence in nature. One explanation for this is ...
Sexual ornaments found only in females are a rare occurrence in nature. One explanation for this is ...
Understanding how selection acts on traits individually and in combination is an important step in d...
A sexually selected signal may serve a dual function being both attractive to mates and deterring ri...
In the pipefish Syngnathus typhle sex roles are reversed, that is, females compete more intensely th...
Extravagant male ornaments expressed during reproduction are almost invariably assumed to be sexuall...
Sexual dimorphism, or phenotypic differentiation of the sexes, is widespread amongst animals. It is ...
Mate choice plays an important role in sexual selection and speciation. The evolution of mate choice...
Sex-specific ornaments typically occur in males, but they can also develop in females. While there a...
Anthropogenic habitat changes are disrupting the mate choice process in a range of organisms, with c...
Ornaments, weapons and aggressive behaviours may evolve in female animals by mate choice and intrase...
Swordtail fish (Poeciliidae: genus Xiphophorus) are a paradigmatic case of sexual selection by senso...
Observations of male mate choice are increasingly common, even in species with traditional sex roles...
not explain why their expression varies so much across lineages. We argue that coercion-avoidance ca...
Sexual ornaments found only in females are a rare occurrence in nature. One explanation for this is ...
Sexual ornaments found only in females are a rare occurrence in nature. One explanation for this is ...
Sexual ornaments found only in females are a rare occurrence in nature. One explanation for this is ...
Understanding how selection acts on traits individually and in combination is an important step in d...
A sexually selected signal may serve a dual function being both attractive to mates and deterring ri...
In the pipefish Syngnathus typhle sex roles are reversed, that is, females compete more intensely th...
Extravagant male ornaments expressed during reproduction are almost invariably assumed to be sexuall...
Sexual dimorphism, or phenotypic differentiation of the sexes, is widespread amongst animals. It is ...
Mate choice plays an important role in sexual selection and speciation. The evolution of mate choice...
Sex-specific ornaments typically occur in males, but they can also develop in females. While there a...
Anthropogenic habitat changes are disrupting the mate choice process in a range of organisms, with c...
Ornaments, weapons and aggressive behaviours may evolve in female animals by mate choice and intrase...
Swordtail fish (Poeciliidae: genus Xiphophorus) are a paradigmatic case of sexual selection by senso...
Observations of male mate choice are increasingly common, even in species with traditional sex roles...
not explain why their expression varies so much across lineages. We argue that coercion-avoidance ca...