Understanding the evolution of female multiple mating (polyandry) is crucial for understanding sexual selection and sexual conflict. Despite this interest, little is known about its genetic basis or whether genetics influences the evolutionary origin or maintenance of polyandry. Here, we explore the quantitative genetic basis of polyandry in the parasitoid wasp Nasonia vitripennis, a species in which female remating has been observed to evolve in the laboratory. We performed a quantitative genetic experiment on a recently collected population of wasps. We found low heritabilities of female polyandry (re-mating frequency after 18 h), low heritability of courtship duration and a slightly higher heritability of copulation duration. However, th...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...
Phenotypic correlations between traits are thought to reflect genetic correlations. However, traits ...
Our understanding of how natural selection should shape sex allocation is perhaps more developed tha...
The evolution and maintenance of multiple mating in females (polyandry) is an adaptive puzzle since ...
Research over the past two decades suggests that polyandry is almost ubiquitous in nature. In some c...
Research over the past two decades suggests that polyandry is almost ubiquitous in nature. In some c...
A major focus in speciation genetics is to identify the chromosomal regions and genes that reduce hy...
A major focus in speciation genetics is to identify the chromosomal regions and genes that reduce hy...
A major focus in speciation genetics is to identify the chromosomal regions and genes that reduce hy...
The taxonomically widespread nature of polyandry remains a puzzle. Much of the empirical work regard...
The taxonomically widespread nature of polyandry remains a puzzle. Much of the empirical work regard...
Understanding the evolution of multiple mating by females (polyandry) is an important question in be...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...
Sexual conflict theory predicts that female and male reproductive traits coevolve resulting in disru...
The costs and benefits of mating are frequently measured in order to understand why females mate mul...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...
Phenotypic correlations between traits are thought to reflect genetic correlations. However, traits ...
Our understanding of how natural selection should shape sex allocation is perhaps more developed tha...
The evolution and maintenance of multiple mating in females (polyandry) is an adaptive puzzle since ...
Research over the past two decades suggests that polyandry is almost ubiquitous in nature. In some c...
Research over the past two decades suggests that polyandry is almost ubiquitous in nature. In some c...
A major focus in speciation genetics is to identify the chromosomal regions and genes that reduce hy...
A major focus in speciation genetics is to identify the chromosomal regions and genes that reduce hy...
A major focus in speciation genetics is to identify the chromosomal regions and genes that reduce hy...
The taxonomically widespread nature of polyandry remains a puzzle. Much of the empirical work regard...
The taxonomically widespread nature of polyandry remains a puzzle. Much of the empirical work regard...
Understanding the evolution of multiple mating by females (polyandry) is an important question in be...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...
Sexual conflict theory predicts that female and male reproductive traits coevolve resulting in disru...
The costs and benefits of mating are frequently measured in order to understand why females mate mul...
The evolution of the complex societies displayed by social insects depended partly on high relatedne...
Phenotypic correlations between traits are thought to reflect genetic correlations. However, traits ...
Our understanding of how natural selection should shape sex allocation is perhaps more developed tha...