The evolution of male parental care in vertebrates with internal fertilization must have been preceded by a stage in which males profit by staying with the female after copulation. This paper discusses the results of a series of computer simulations to determine the pay-off to post-copulatory mate guarding under various conditions. Guarding is promoted by asynchrony in fertility of the females, high copulation frequencies of females, preference of females for males using the guarding strategy, and mate fidelity of guarded females. Moreover, it is demonstrated that, under several conditions, apparently those operating in a natural environment, the success of the guarding strategy is inversely related to its frequency in the population. This ...
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs; copulations outside the pair bond) are widespread in birds and may res...
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs) (copulations outside the pair bond) resulting in extra-pair fertilizat...
Homosexual behaviour occurs in over 130 species of birds, yet explaining its maintenance in evolutio...
Socially monogamous species vary widely in the frequency of extrapair offspring, but this is usually...
In many birds, males are presumed to protect their paternity by closely guarding their mate or copul...
Parents in many animal species care for their offspring. In some species, males care more; in other ...
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs) (copulations outside the pair bond) resulting in extra-pair fertilizat...
Two alternative hypotheses have been proposed to explain how social and genetic mating systems are i...
The adaptive significance of female selection of copulation partners remains unresolved, particularl...
In many socially monogamous birds, males maintain close proximity to their mates during the fertile ...
Males may increase their ¢tness through extra-pair copulations (copulations outside the pair bond) t...
In many socially monogamous species, both sexes seek copulation outside the pair bond in order to in...
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs; copulations outside the pair bond) are widespread in birds and may res...
In this paper we propose a novel form of social control of mate choice. Through mother guarding, off...
Current theory concerning the evolution of parental care posits that one or both of the sexes may re...
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs; copulations outside the pair bond) are widespread in birds and may res...
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs) (copulations outside the pair bond) resulting in extra-pair fertilizat...
Homosexual behaviour occurs in over 130 species of birds, yet explaining its maintenance in evolutio...
Socially monogamous species vary widely in the frequency of extrapair offspring, but this is usually...
In many birds, males are presumed to protect their paternity by closely guarding their mate or copul...
Parents in many animal species care for their offspring. In some species, males care more; in other ...
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs) (copulations outside the pair bond) resulting in extra-pair fertilizat...
Two alternative hypotheses have been proposed to explain how social and genetic mating systems are i...
The adaptive significance of female selection of copulation partners remains unresolved, particularl...
In many socially monogamous birds, males maintain close proximity to their mates during the fertile ...
Males may increase their ¢tness through extra-pair copulations (copulations outside the pair bond) t...
In many socially monogamous species, both sexes seek copulation outside the pair bond in order to in...
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs; copulations outside the pair bond) are widespread in birds and may res...
In this paper we propose a novel form of social control of mate choice. Through mother guarding, off...
Current theory concerning the evolution of parental care posits that one or both of the sexes may re...
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs; copulations outside the pair bond) are widespread in birds and may res...
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs) (copulations outside the pair bond) resulting in extra-pair fertilizat...
Homosexual behaviour occurs in over 130 species of birds, yet explaining its maintenance in evolutio...