The Trivers–Willard hypothesis states that mothers should adjust their offspring sex ratio according to their own condition and the environment they face during breeding. Past tests of this hypothesis have focused on how natural variation in weather, food availability, or predation pressure shapes sex allocation trade-offs. However, anthropogenic activities, such as urbanization, can alter all of the above characteristics presenting animals with novel challenges in optimizing their brood sex ratio. Previous research has examined how urban living influences individual body condition in several bird taxa, but few have explored subsequent impacts on secondary offspring sex ratio. One likely mediator of the link between environmental conditions...
1. A major component of sex-allocation theory, the Trivers-Willard Model (TWM), posits that sons and...
Theory predicts that mothers should adjust offspring sex ratios when the expected fitness gains or r...
The phenomenon of primary offspring sex ratio adjustment is being extensively studied, yet knowledge...
The Trivers–Willard hypothesis states that mothers should adjust their offspring sex ratio according...
Since male and female offspring may have different costs and benefits, parents may use sex ratio adj...
There is evidence of offspring sex ratio adjustment in a range of species, but the potential mechani...
<div><p>There is evidence of offspring sex ratio adjustment in a range of species, but the potential...
Cooperatively breeding birds have been used frequently to study sex allocation because the adaptive ...
There is evidence of offspring sex ratio adjustment in a range of species, but the potential mechani...
Empirical studies of sex ratios in birds have been limited due to difficulties in determining offspr...
Abstract: In species where offspring fitness is sex‐specifically influenced by maternal reproductive...
Female birds have been shown to have a remarkable degree of control over the sex ratio of the offspr...
Abstract In a number of bird species, the sex ratio of the broods is not random, instead it is re-la...
Under many circumstances, it might be adaptive for parents to bias the investment in offspring in re...
1. A major component of sex-allocation theory, the Trivers-Willard Model (TWM), posits that sons and...
Theory predicts that mothers should adjust offspring sex ratios when the expected fitness gains or r...
The phenomenon of primary offspring sex ratio adjustment is being extensively studied, yet knowledge...
The Trivers–Willard hypothesis states that mothers should adjust their offspring sex ratio according...
Since male and female offspring may have different costs and benefits, parents may use sex ratio adj...
There is evidence of offspring sex ratio adjustment in a range of species, but the potential mechani...
<div><p>There is evidence of offspring sex ratio adjustment in a range of species, but the potential...
Cooperatively breeding birds have been used frequently to study sex allocation because the adaptive ...
There is evidence of offspring sex ratio adjustment in a range of species, but the potential mechani...
Empirical studies of sex ratios in birds have been limited due to difficulties in determining offspr...
Abstract: In species where offspring fitness is sex‐specifically influenced by maternal reproductive...
Female birds have been shown to have a remarkable degree of control over the sex ratio of the offspr...
Abstract In a number of bird species, the sex ratio of the broods is not random, instead it is re-la...
Under many circumstances, it might be adaptive for parents to bias the investment in offspring in re...
1. A major component of sex-allocation theory, the Trivers-Willard Model (TWM), posits that sons and...
Theory predicts that mothers should adjust offspring sex ratios when the expected fitness gains or r...
The phenomenon of primary offspring sex ratio adjustment is being extensively studied, yet knowledge...