Recent studies have documented male traits that cause physical harm to their mates during copulation. Such harm has been suggested to either (1) arise as a negative pleiotropic side effect of adaptations that give males a reproductive advantage in another context or (2) represent a male adaptation per se. In other words, male traits that cause harm to their mates may become established despite the fact that they cause harm or because they do so. A critical assumption of the latter hypotheses is that females respond to infliction of harm in a manner that is beneficial to their mates: by reducing their propensity to remate and/or by elevating their current reproductive rate. In the present study, we test this assumption by experimentally infl...
International audienceMales in many taxa are known to exhibit behavioural plasticity in response to ...
Competition between males creates potential for pre- and postcopulatory sexual selection and conflic...
Species with intense male–male competition for access to females often show alternative reproductive...
Recent studies have documented male traits that cause physical harm to their mates during copulation...
The interests of males and females over reproduction rarely coincide and conflicts between the sexes...
International audienceConflicts of interest between mates can promote the evolution of male traits t...
International audienceConflicts of interest between mates can promote the evolution of male traits t...
SummaryOne of the most enigmatic observations in evolutionary biology is the evolution of morphologi...
This is the final version of the article. Available from BioMed Central via the DOI in this record.B...
Males can harm the females they interact with, but populations/species vary widely in the occurrence...
AbstractMales of many species assess the likely level of sperm competition and respond adaptively, f...
One explanation for the cost to mating for females caused by damaging male mating behavior is that t...
Phenotypic plasticity allows animals to maximise fitness by conditionally expressing the phenotype b...
Natural selection should favour fertile individuals who are able to successfully copulate and pass o...
Mate competition provides the opportunity for sexual selection which often acts strongly on males, b...
International audienceMales in many taxa are known to exhibit behavioural plasticity in response to ...
Competition between males creates potential for pre- and postcopulatory sexual selection and conflic...
Species with intense male–male competition for access to females often show alternative reproductive...
Recent studies have documented male traits that cause physical harm to their mates during copulation...
The interests of males and females over reproduction rarely coincide and conflicts between the sexes...
International audienceConflicts of interest between mates can promote the evolution of male traits t...
International audienceConflicts of interest between mates can promote the evolution of male traits t...
SummaryOne of the most enigmatic observations in evolutionary biology is the evolution of morphologi...
This is the final version of the article. Available from BioMed Central via the DOI in this record.B...
Males can harm the females they interact with, but populations/species vary widely in the occurrence...
AbstractMales of many species assess the likely level of sperm competition and respond adaptively, f...
One explanation for the cost to mating for females caused by damaging male mating behavior is that t...
Phenotypic plasticity allows animals to maximise fitness by conditionally expressing the phenotype b...
Natural selection should favour fertile individuals who are able to successfully copulate and pass o...
Mate competition provides the opportunity for sexual selection which often acts strongly on males, b...
International audienceMales in many taxa are known to exhibit behavioural plasticity in response to ...
Competition between males creates potential for pre- and postcopulatory sexual selection and conflic...
Species with intense male–male competition for access to females often show alternative reproductive...