There is evidence that animal personality traits can have spill-over effects for sexual selection, with studies reporting that male behavioural types are associated with success during pre- and post-copulatory sexual selection. Given these links between personality and sexual traits, and the evidence that their expression can depend on an individual's nutritional status (i.e. condition), a novel prediction is that changes in a male's diet should alter both the average expression of personality and sexual traits, and their covariance. We tested these predictions using the guppy Poecilia reticulata, a species previously shown to exhibit strong condition dependence in ejaculate traits and a positive correlation between sperm production and ind...
Within populations, there commonly exists consistent among-individual differences in behaviour. As a...
Abstract Background Variation in mate choice behaviour among females within a population may influen...
Males from different populations of the same species often differ in their sexually selected traits....
Female choice can impose persistent directional selection on male sexually selected traits, yet such...
Assessing the consequences of personality traits on reproductive success is one of the most importan...
Sexual selection can operate both before and after mating. For males, selection will favor a suite o...
The role that genotype-by-environment interactions (GEIs) play in sexual selection has only recently...
In polyandrous species, a male's reproductive success depends on his fertilization capability and tr...
<div><p>Environmental and ecological conditions can shape the evolution of life history traits in ma...
As sperm production is costly, males are expected to strategically allocate resources to sperm produ...
Until recently, paternal effects – the influence of fathers on their offspring due to environmental ...
How individuals within the same population show consistent differences in different behaviours, i.e....
Previous work (Reynolds & Gross 1992) has demonstrated that mate choice enables female guppies, ...
Female sperm storage (FSS) is taxonomically widespread and often associated with intense sperm compe...
In polyandrous species males invest significant resources in producing large and high-quality ejacul...
Within populations, there commonly exists consistent among-individual differences in behaviour. As a...
Abstract Background Variation in mate choice behaviour among females within a population may influen...
Males from different populations of the same species often differ in their sexually selected traits....
Female choice can impose persistent directional selection on male sexually selected traits, yet such...
Assessing the consequences of personality traits on reproductive success is one of the most importan...
Sexual selection can operate both before and after mating. For males, selection will favor a suite o...
The role that genotype-by-environment interactions (GEIs) play in sexual selection has only recently...
In polyandrous species, a male's reproductive success depends on his fertilization capability and tr...
<div><p>Environmental and ecological conditions can shape the evolution of life history traits in ma...
As sperm production is costly, males are expected to strategically allocate resources to sperm produ...
Until recently, paternal effects – the influence of fathers on their offspring due to environmental ...
How individuals within the same population show consistent differences in different behaviours, i.e....
Previous work (Reynolds & Gross 1992) has demonstrated that mate choice enables female guppies, ...
Female sperm storage (FSS) is taxonomically widespread and often associated with intense sperm compe...
In polyandrous species males invest significant resources in producing large and high-quality ejacul...
Within populations, there commonly exists consistent among-individual differences in behaviour. As a...
Abstract Background Variation in mate choice behaviour among females within a population may influen...
Males from different populations of the same species often differ in their sexually selected traits....