Selection on signals that mediate social competition varies with resource availability. Climate regulates resource availability, which may affect the strength of competition and selection on signals. Traditionally, this meant that more seasonal, colder, or dryer – overall harsher – environments should favor the elaboration of male signals under stronger male-male competition, increasing sexual dimorphism. However, females also use signals to compete; thus, harsher environments could strengthen competition and favor elaboration of signals in both sexes, decreasing sexual dimorphism. Alternatively, harsher environments could decrease sexual dimorphism due to scarcer resources to invest in signal elaboration in both sexes. We evaluated these c...
Gonzalez-Voyer A, Thomas GH, Liker A, Krüger O, Komdeur J, Szekely T. Sex roles in birds: Phylogenet...
For detailed information concerning data collection please see Gonzalez-Voyer et al. Sex roles in bi...
1. Sexual conflict is a fundamental driver of male/female adaptations, an engine of biodiversity, an...
Behavioural data and R code to reproduce analyses of the paper "Differences in plumage coloration pr...
Environmental shifts may induce sudden reversals in the relative quality or sexual attractiveness of...
Animal migration can lead to a population distribution known as seasonal sympatry, in which closely ...
Classical sexual selection theory provides a well-supported conceptual framework for understanding t...
Following Charles Darwin, research on sexual dichromatism has long focused on sexual selection drivi...
Sexual selection operates via female choice and male competition, which can act independently, in co...
Seasonally breeding animals often exhibit different social structures during non-breeding and breedi...
The environment can impose constraints on signal transmission properties such that signals should ev...
Aim: Patterns of separation among males and females, known as sexual segregation, traditionally corr...
Secondary sexual traits have high heritabilities and are exposed to strong, environmentally sensitiv...
Because studies of plumage coloration often focus on highly elaborate and conspicuous males, little ...
Extra-pair mating could drive sexual selection in socially monogamous species, but support for this ...
Gonzalez-Voyer A, Thomas GH, Liker A, Krüger O, Komdeur J, Szekely T. Sex roles in birds: Phylogenet...
For detailed information concerning data collection please see Gonzalez-Voyer et al. Sex roles in bi...
1. Sexual conflict is a fundamental driver of male/female adaptations, an engine of biodiversity, an...
Behavioural data and R code to reproduce analyses of the paper "Differences in plumage coloration pr...
Environmental shifts may induce sudden reversals in the relative quality or sexual attractiveness of...
Animal migration can lead to a population distribution known as seasonal sympatry, in which closely ...
Classical sexual selection theory provides a well-supported conceptual framework for understanding t...
Following Charles Darwin, research on sexual dichromatism has long focused on sexual selection drivi...
Sexual selection operates via female choice and male competition, which can act independently, in co...
Seasonally breeding animals often exhibit different social structures during non-breeding and breedi...
The environment can impose constraints on signal transmission properties such that signals should ev...
Aim: Patterns of separation among males and females, known as sexual segregation, traditionally corr...
Secondary sexual traits have high heritabilities and are exposed to strong, environmentally sensitiv...
Because studies of plumage coloration often focus on highly elaborate and conspicuous males, little ...
Extra-pair mating could drive sexual selection in socially monogamous species, but support for this ...
Gonzalez-Voyer A, Thomas GH, Liker A, Krüger O, Komdeur J, Szekely T. Sex roles in birds: Phylogenet...
For detailed information concerning data collection please see Gonzalez-Voyer et al. Sex roles in bi...
1. Sexual conflict is a fundamental driver of male/female adaptations, an engine of biodiversity, an...