Brighter red three-spined stickleback, Gasterostetus aculeatus, males have been shown to be preferred by females in the laboratory but in the field, these males did not receive more eggs. Instead, they had heavier eggs in their brood. We investigated the hypothesis that sexual selection for red coloration in male sticklebacks acts through mate choice by preferred males, who can afford to be choosy, for high-quality females which lay heavier eggs. We assume here that heavier eggs provide a direct fitness advantage. In simultaneous choice tests males were presented with two females differing in size. The number of zigzags directed to and the time spent orienting to each female were measured. After the test the females laid eggs, which we coun...
The expenditures of time and energy on parental activities of female and male threespine stickleback...
Sexual selection drives the evolution of exaggerated male ornaments in many animal species. Female o...
Receiver-bias models of signal evolution predict that male sexually selected traits evolve through p...
Brighter red three-spined stickleback, Gasterostetus aculeatus, males have been shown to be preferre...
Male sticklebacks display multiple ornaments, and these ornaments have been shown to be preferred by...
AN important problem in evolutionary biology since the time of Darwin has been to understand why fem...
AN important problem in evolutionary biology since the time of Darwin has been to understand why fem...
Female choice, identified as a major force in sexual selection theory, has recently been demonstrate...
Female choice, identified as a major force in sexual selection theory, has recently been demonstrate...
Under laboratory conditions, female three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.) show a mat...
The intensity of sexual selection depends on environmental conditions; factors such as pre-dation ri...
Female mate preferences for ecologically relevant traits may enhance natural selection, leading to r...
Female mate preferences for ecologically relevant traits may enhance natural selection, leading to r...
Female mate preferences for ecologically relevant traits may enhance natural selection, leading to r...
In the fifteen-spined stickleback, Spinachia spinachia, males provide females with direct benefits b...
The expenditures of time and energy on parental activities of female and male threespine stickleback...
Sexual selection drives the evolution of exaggerated male ornaments in many animal species. Female o...
Receiver-bias models of signal evolution predict that male sexually selected traits evolve through p...
Brighter red three-spined stickleback, Gasterostetus aculeatus, males have been shown to be preferre...
Male sticklebacks display multiple ornaments, and these ornaments have been shown to be preferred by...
AN important problem in evolutionary biology since the time of Darwin has been to understand why fem...
AN important problem in evolutionary biology since the time of Darwin has been to understand why fem...
Female choice, identified as a major force in sexual selection theory, has recently been demonstrate...
Female choice, identified as a major force in sexual selection theory, has recently been demonstrate...
Under laboratory conditions, female three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.) show a mat...
The intensity of sexual selection depends on environmental conditions; factors such as pre-dation ri...
Female mate preferences for ecologically relevant traits may enhance natural selection, leading to r...
Female mate preferences for ecologically relevant traits may enhance natural selection, leading to r...
Female mate preferences for ecologically relevant traits may enhance natural selection, leading to r...
In the fifteen-spined stickleback, Spinachia spinachia, males provide females with direct benefits b...
The expenditures of time and energy on parental activities of female and male threespine stickleback...
Sexual selection drives the evolution of exaggerated male ornaments in many animal species. Female o...
Receiver-bias models of signal evolution predict that male sexually selected traits evolve through p...