International audienceSignificant additive genetic variance often occurs for male advertisement traits in spite of the directional selection imposed by female choice, a problem generally known in evolutionary biology as the lek paradox. One hypothesis, which has limited support from recent studies, for the resolution of this paradox is the role of genotype × environment interaction in which no one genotype exhibits the superior performance in all environments—a crossover of reaction norms. However, these studies have not characterized the actual variation of reaction norms present in natural populations, and the extent to which crossover maintains genetic variance remains unknown. Here, we present a study of genotype × environment interacti...
Female preferences play a major role in the elaboration and diversification of male traits: as a sel...
International audienceSexual selection acting on small initial differences in mating signals and mat...
Genetic benefits in the shape of 'good genes' have been invoked to explain costly female choice in t...
International audienceSignificant additive genetic variance often occurs for male advertisement trai...
International audienceModels of indirect (genetic) benefits sexual selection predict linkage disequi...
National audienceModels of indirect (genetic) benefits sexual selection predict linkage disequilibri...
International audienceUnderstanding the evolutionary mechanisms that maintain genetic variation in n...
Models of indirect (genetic) benefits sexual selection predict linkage disequilibria between genes t...
Models of indirect (genetic) benefits sexual selection predict linkage disequilibria between genes t...
Mate choice for good-genes remains one of the most controversial evolutionary processes ever propose...
Aggregations of sexually displaying males, leks, are some of the most spectacular yet paradoxical ph...
Abstract The lek paradox states that maintaining genetic variation necessary for ‘indirect benefit ’...
International audienceSexual selection theory predicts low costs of choice when females choose among...
The lek paradox states that maintaining genetic variation necessary for 'indirect benefit' models of...
Studies of the variance and covariance between female mating preferences and sexually selected male ...
Female preferences play a major role in the elaboration and diversification of male traits: as a sel...
International audienceSexual selection acting on small initial differences in mating signals and mat...
Genetic benefits in the shape of 'good genes' have been invoked to explain costly female choice in t...
International audienceSignificant additive genetic variance often occurs for male advertisement trai...
International audienceModels of indirect (genetic) benefits sexual selection predict linkage disequi...
National audienceModels of indirect (genetic) benefits sexual selection predict linkage disequilibri...
International audienceUnderstanding the evolutionary mechanisms that maintain genetic variation in n...
Models of indirect (genetic) benefits sexual selection predict linkage disequilibria between genes t...
Models of indirect (genetic) benefits sexual selection predict linkage disequilibria between genes t...
Mate choice for good-genes remains one of the most controversial evolutionary processes ever propose...
Aggregations of sexually displaying males, leks, are some of the most spectacular yet paradoxical ph...
Abstract The lek paradox states that maintaining genetic variation necessary for ‘indirect benefit ’...
International audienceSexual selection theory predicts low costs of choice when females choose among...
The lek paradox states that maintaining genetic variation necessary for 'indirect benefit' models of...
Studies of the variance and covariance between female mating preferences and sexually selected male ...
Female preferences play a major role in the elaboration and diversification of male traits: as a sel...
International audienceSexual selection acting on small initial differences in mating signals and mat...
Genetic benefits in the shape of 'good genes' have been invoked to explain costly female choice in t...