BIO 555/755
Behavioral Ecology
Lecture Notes V: Sexual conflict & selection
Why sex?
Costs of sex:
-
Cost of meiosis - 'lose' by sacrificing half the genotype (in comparison
to parthenogenic individuals)
-
Cost of recombination - sexual reproduction entails the breakup of successful
genotypes & the recombination of their elements; recombination may
produce new & possibly dangerous homozygosities
-
Cost of mating - time & energy to secure a mate + danger of cuckoldry
-
Cost
of producing males - consider a rare female in a dioecious (having
male & female reproductive organs on different individuals) sexual
population that reproduces by obligate parthenogenesis. Assuming no reduction
in fecundity, the parthenogenetic female is likely to produce twice as
many daughters & 4 times as many granddaughters as the average sexual
female!
How can sex persist with such costs?
Benefits of sex:
-
Genetic hypotheses:
-
advantages of recombination (independent of the production of variable
offspring, e.g., sexually-reproducing species may have an advantage over
asexually-reproducing species in 'clearing' lineage of deleterious mutations)
-
Are mutation rates higher where sexually-reproducing species are located??
Insufficient data!
-
Ecological hypotheses:
-
Hard-selection hypothesis (also known as the lottery hypothesis) - biparental
sex is maintained by unpredictable changes in the environment; 'variable'
offspring may be better able to survive in the 'new' environment
-
Soft-selection hypothesis - sex is maintained by intraspecific competition
in a stable environment, i.e., production of variable or 'rare' offspring
reduces competition for resources
-
Red Queen hypothesis
- sex is maintained by selection resulting from interactions between biological
'enemies' (e.g., hosts & parasites); outcrossing & recombination
favored because they allow production of 'rare' offspring expected to have
a greater chance of 'escaping' parasites
For additional information about the evolution & persistance
of sex, click
here and check out:

Why sexes?
Imagine a population with sexual reproduction, but without sexes. Also,
there is a range of parental gamete types:
-
Small - 'inexpensive' to produce (energetically)
-
Intermediate - too large to produce in great numbers BUT too small to support
development of embryo without additional cytoplasm
-
Large - energetically expensive but with sufficient cytoplasm for development
Such variation might lead to ‘specialization':
-
Small gametes - specialize in seeking out larger gametes & would 'compete'
with other small gametes
-
Large gametes - no need to seek additional cytoplasm; 'specialize' in containing
necessary nutrients
Natural selection could produce a population in which individuals maximize
fitness by producing either small or large gametes, but not intermediate
(i.e., disruptive
or diversifying selection).
This model is hypothetical & other explanations are possible, but
given the existence of males and females, how can an individual male (sperm-maker)
or female (egg-maker) maximize their fitness?
-
Females - have more invested in each gamete than do males, e.g., bird eggs
may constitute 25% or more of a female's body weight and, while the eggs
of female mammals are smaller, females produce the placenta, nourish the
embryo(s), & produce milk after birth
-
Males - individually, sperm are relatively inexpensive to produce
Thus, in general, males should compete for females, i.e., the sex investing
more in reproduction will be a crucial resource for the sex investing less
. . . and competition tends to increase variance.
Observational evidence:
-
Reproductive success in male & female Jamaican Lizards (Anolis garmani;
Trivers 1972):
-
Bateman, A.J. 1948. Intrasexual selection in Drosophila. Heredity 2:349-368.
Again, variance in male reproductive success is much greater than for
females.
Male & female investment in reproduction (Trivers 1972):
Parental investment = any behavior toward offspring that increases the
chances of the offspring's survival at the cost of the parent's ability
to invest in future offspring.
-
Males & females - both selected for producing the number of offspring
that results in maximum reproductive success
-
Reproductive success = not measured simply by number of offspring but by
difference between number of offspring (benefits) & decreased reproductive
potential in the future because of present offspring (costs)
-
Females often invest more in each offspring & their investment curve
tends to rise more quickly (shown below). As a result, males & females
may disagree about the optimum number of offspring &, as a result,
males in many species will seek access to additional females. Such behavior
leads to greater competition & selection.
Source: Barash 1982 (Figure 10.3, p. 219)
Male-male competition & sexual selection
-
R.L. Trivers suggested that sexual selection will act primarily on the
sex investing less (males) & individuals of this sex will compete with
each other for access to the sex investing more (females)
-
Sexual selection = operates through variance in reproductive success; usually
acts more strongly on males because males experience greater variance in
reproductive success
Variation in reproductive success among men & women
in two Xavante Indian villages
in Brazil (Salzano et al. 1967).
-
Charles Darwin
- suggested that sexual selection would lead to the evolution of two sorts
of
male
characters:
-
Intrasexual selection - leads to evolution of characters involved in 'winning'
in 'combat' with other males
-
Intersexual selection = epigamic selection - leads to evolution of characters
important in attracting females
Intrasexual selection - favors the evolution of mechanisms that
enhance ability to compete with other members of one's own sex. Such mechanisms
may operate before or after mating:
Aggressive defense by males of females (or of territories that attract
females) ---> Such aggression leads to the evolution of increased male
strength and size.
Examples:
Thornhill, R. 1980. Sexual selection within mating swarms of the lovebug,
Plecia
nearctica. Anim. Behav. 28:405-412.
-
Males emerge from litter & hover in swarms sometimes consisting of
thousands of individuals.
-
Females fly into swarms & are quickly grasped by a hovering male.
-
Females - always enter swarms from below, so . . .
-
Males - those near the bottom of swarms have greater mating success
What determines a male's relative position in a swarm??
Sizes of male lovebugs at 3 vertical positions in 9 mating swarms:
|
Swarm
|
Vertical position
|
Mean male size
(1 unit = 0.03 mm)
|
|
1
|
Top
|
51
|
|
2
|
Top
|
53
|
|
3
|
Top
|
55
|
|
4
|
Middle
|
61
|
|
5
|
Middle
|
64
|
|
6
|
Middle
|
66
|
|
7
|
Bottom
|
73
|
|
8
|
Bottom
|
73
|
|
9
|
Bottom
|
75
|
-
Hovering males frequently fly into or toward ‘neighbors' ---> Such interactions
lead to stratification of male swarms by size
For more information about sexual selection, click
here!
Sexual coercion in a terrestrial salamander: males
punish socially polyandrous female partners (Jaeger et al. 2002) -
Traditionally, the theory of sexual selection has been divided into two
components: intrasexual competition for mates and intersexual mate choice.
Clutton-Brock and Parker (1995) suggested that sexual coercion be included
in the sexual selection theory. Sexual coercion can be defined as a means
by which males attempt to manipulate females into mating with them. Jaeger
et al. (2002) examined the concept of sexual
coercion in Plethodon
cinerus, red-backed salamander. They found that males aggressively
punished socially polyandrous female partners more severely that socially
monogamous female partners. Males spent more time in the threat posture
(ATR) and displayed more edge behavior (escape behavior) when associated
with a socially polyandrous female partner. Males spent less time touching
a socially polyandrous female partner. Males, on average, kept a greater
distance between himself and a socially polyandrous female partner. Males
also bit socially polyandrous female partners with significantly greater
frequency than socially monogamous female partners. This data supports
the hypothesis that greater male aggression will be displayed towards a
socially polyandrous female partner than towards a socially monogamous
female partner.
- Contributed by Jodi Stacy |
Correlation between polygyny & sexual dimorphism
In polygynous species, one male mates with several females &, as
a result, male variance in reproductive success increases. Increased variance
---> increased intrasexual selection ---> increased selection for increased
size & strength
Relationship between degree of polygyny (mean harem size)
& sexual dimorphism in primates (from Barash 1982; based on data from
Alexander et al. 1979).
|
|
Pre- & post-mating strategies
1) Abele, H. & S. Gilchrist. 1977. Homosexual rape and sexual
selection in acanthocephalan
worms. Science 197:81-83
-
Parasitic worms that occur in intestines of many mammals
-
After mating with a female ---> male introduces a copulatory plug that
prevents his sperm from leaking out & prevents other males from copulating
with the female
-
When a male encounters another male ---> introduces a plug but no sperm
which renders the 'victim' sterile
2) Craig, G. 1967. Mosquitos: female monogamy induced by male accessory
gland substance. Science 156:1499-1501
-
after mating, male mosquitoes secrete a hormone that reduces the sexual
receptivity of the must-mated female

3) Waage, J. 1979. Dual function of the damselfly
penis: sperm removal and transfer. Science 203:916-918
-
transfers sperm AND removes sperm deposited by 'preceding' male (see photo
to the right)
4) Lloyd, J.E. 1979. Mating behavior and natural selection. Florida
Entomol. 62:17-34
-
male bedbugs (Afrocimex spp.) possess structures that mimic female
genitalia; rival males who mount these female 'mimics' waste their sperm
5) Wilson, E.O. 1975. Sociobiology. Belknap Press.
-
many species exhibit prolonged copulation (a form of mate guarding)
Enallagma exsulans
in copula
6) Hrdy, S.B. 1974. Folia Primatol. 22:19-58 (langurs) &
Bertram, B.C.R. 1976. In: Growing
points
in Ethology. Cambridge Univ. Press (lions)
-
male langurs & lions practive infanticide after taking over a troop
or pride to bring females into estrus sooner
7) Thornhill, R. 1979. Adaptive female-mimicking behavior in a scorpionfly.
Science 205:412-415
-
males use prey in courtship ---> offers prey to a female, then (if she
accepts) mates with her
-
male strategies:
-
some steal prey from other males ('victims' must wait longer before copulating)
-
deceptive transvestism - some males act like females (landing near another
male that has a prey item & lowering wings as receptive females do)
to obtain a prey item
8) Beecher & Beecher (1979) - male Bank Swallows guard mates during
their fertile period
Intersexual selection & mate choice
Mate choice:
-
mechanism by which intersexual selection operates
-
any pattern of behavior, shown by members of one sex, that leads to their
being more likely to mate with certain members of the opposite sex than
with others
-
Criteria on which mate choice may be based:
I - Choice for high fecundity or fertility - in many species,
females continue to grow after reaching sexual maturity & larger females
can often produce more eggs & offspring
-
Male choice for larger females, e.g., isopods (below, left; Behaviour 55:1-14),
Mormon crickets (below, right) (Gwynne 1981), & checkered
white butterflies (Anim. Behav. 30:108-112)
Female Isopod (Arcturus hastiger) with children
on antenna
|
Mormon cricket
|
-
Female choice for males with increased fecundity, e.g., females may select
males that court most vigorously, if 'vigor' is correlated with sperm supply
Evidence: Halliday (1976) -
Smooth newt
(Triturus vulgaris) - males deposit spermatophores on bottom
of ponds during sexual encounters &, the more spermatophores deposited,
the greater the probability that a female will pick up a male's spermatophore(s)

II - Choice for immediate gains and/or parental ability
-
Males in many species provide females with food as
a necessary prelude to mating
Evidence: Thornhill (1976) - Courtship feeding by the Hangingfly (Hylobittacus
apicalis)
-
Females tend to accept only males with insect prey above a certain size.
Possible benefits of such a preference:
-
Male mates while female eats. A larger insect means that females eat longer
and, therefore, copulations are longer & this helps ensure fertilization
of eggs
-
More food from a male means less hunting by the female; less hunting means
a reduced risk of being caught in a spider's web
-
Males that bring larger prey may be of higher quality
Additional evidence: In many species of birds, males feed females for at
least part of the breeding season. Such behavior is referred to as ‘courtship
feeding' & this feeding may be beneficial to females because:
1 - Food given to females may contribute to reproductive success by
providing energy at a critical time
2 - Feeding may strengthen the pair bond (possibly true but difficult
to test!)
-
Females may not associate with males who feed them at low rates
-
Females may divorce males who do not provide sufficient food
-
Among species in which males provide some or all of the parental care,
females may choose males on basis of capacity to do so
-
Avian courtship feeding - ability to feed female may be correlated with
ability to feed young
Female Sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) are more likely to
lay eggs in nests of males that
already contain eggs (Ridley & Rechten 1981). Why??
-
Dilution effect - more eggs in the nest means reduced chance that particular
eggs will to lost to predation
-
Males are more vigorous in keeping other fish from a nest during the 'parental
phase' than during the 'courtship phase' ---> female laying eggs in nests
with eggs are likely to be mating with 'parental phase' males
III - Choice for mate complementarity
-
Reproductive success may be affected not only by various individual qualities
but also by the extent to which a pair's genotypes & capacities to
provide reproductive effort complement one another
Degree of relatedness ---> Why might breeding with a closely related individual
be detrimental??
-
Deleterious genes more likely to be expressed
-
Offspring insufficiently variable to cope with varying environment
-
Beneficial interactions between different alleles (heterosis)
at same genetic locus lost
-
Offspring more alike &, as a result, may compete more intensely
However, outbreeding also has potential 'costs':
-
Genes adapted for particular environment may be lost or suppressed
-
Travelling to another population (dispersal) may be costly & dangerous
-
Infections from pathogens carried by mate more likely
Possible mechanisms of optimal outbreeding (choosing a mate that is neither
a close relative nor totally unrelated):
-
Prior to mating, members of one sex move away from the area where hatched
or born (natal
dispersal):
-
Birds ---> females usually disperse
-
Mammals ---> males usually disperse
Does such dispersal contribute to 'optimal outbreeding?'
-
Recognition of kin . . . if so, how?:
-
Proximity
-
Early experience (i.e., learn characteristics of close kin)
-
Phenotype matching
-
Innate recognition
-
For more information, click here
and/or here!
Optimal outbreeding model ---> Bateson (1980):
-
Optimal discrepancy hypothesis:
Tests of model:
-
Bateson, P. 1982. Nature 295:236-237.

Japanese Quail (Coturnix coturnix) were reared with some of their
siblings for 30 days, then isolated for 30 days, & then tested:
-
McGregor & Krebs (1982):

Great Tits (Parus major) - mates of females utter songs that are
‘slightly different but not too different' from those of the females' fathers
How might such preferences be generated? Perhaps the result of
an interaction between imprinting & habituation:
-
Sexual imprinting
-
animal forms social attachment to another animal or object (sexual attachments
formed during 'critical period')
-
reduces responsiveness to the 'novel'
-
Habituation - repetitive 'stimulation' reduces responsiveness to the 'familiar'
-
Combination of these two processes (sexual imprinting & habituation)
could lead to a preference for mates a bit different from the 'familiar.'
Choice for complementarity in reproductive effort ---> especially
important in species where the pair bond is maintained over several breeding
seasons
Coulson (1966) - Kittiwakes
(Rissa tridactyla)
-
Newly-formed pairs with little breeding success ---> divorce
-
Newly-formed pairs with greater breeding success ---> tend to remain together
& breeding success tends to improve in subsequent years
Other species:
|
Species
|
Fledglings per
'old' pair
|
Fledglings per
'new' pair
|
% Difference
|
|
Blue-faced Booby
|
0.74
|
0.48
|
43
|
|
Arctic Skua
|
1.51
|
1.10
|
27
|
|
Kittiwake
|
1.59
|
1.19
|
26
|
|
Red-billed Gull
|
0.92
|
0.81
|
12
|
-
Why do experienced pairs have greater breeding success?
-
Advantages due to age or experience:
-
older birds tend to lay more eggs & breed earlier
-
increased duration of a pair bond = earlier laying dates
-
older birds = more efficient at feeding young
-
Quality of nest sites - younger birds may have to nest in peripheral locations
or in lower quality territories
-
Time saved by mating with a familiar partner, e.g., less courtship needed
= earlier breeding = more time for additional broods and/or better choice
of nest sites (in colonial species)
IV - Choice for good genes (i.e., genes that increase the ability
of offspring to survive, compete, & reproduce)
-
Fisher (1930):
-
Elaborate male displays may be sexually selected because they make males
attractive to females. But, how could such preferences develop &, thereafter,
be maintained?
-
Initial preference ---> perhaps because a particular trait was correlated
with male quality (e.g. a longer tail = better flyer) or simply made males
easier to locate or detect
-
Association or covariance important ---> if male preferences have a genetic
basis, the advantage is passed on to a female's sons AND genes that cause
females to prefer that trait will also be favored ----> POSITIVE FEEDBACK
= RUNAWAY SELECTION!
Experimental evidence: Andersson (1982) -
-
Long-tailed Widowbirds (Euplectes progne) - polygynous species that
occupies open savannah habitats in Africa
(a) No difference among four groups before tail length
was altered.
(b) After tails were altered, mating success declined
for males with shortened tails and increased for males with elongated tails.
Mating success = number of active nests in a male's territory (Figure from
Krebs and Davies 1993; Fig. 8.7, p.191)
|
Long-tailed
Widowbird photograph
by
Steve Wilson
|
-
Zahavi (1975) - The Handicap Hypothesis:
-
conspicuous male characters represent a 'handicap' because such characters
may actually reduce a male's capacity to survive
-
females selecting 'handicapped' males, therefore, are selecting mates with
a demonstrated ability to survive in spite of their handicap (i.e., must
be good quality males)
-
could ‘work' if 'handicaps' are flexible or condition dependent
-
For more information, check out this site:
-
Kodric-Brown & Brown (1984):
-
Selection favors evolution of phenotypic traits that vary in such a way
that their expression is highly correlated with genetic fitness.
Graphical model of sexual selection by truth in advertising.
The model assumes
that both expression of the sexual characteristic and
overall fitness are quantitative
traits, distributed normally among males. If there is
a significant positive covariance
between these two variables, females that mate with males
with extreme expression
of the sexual trait will be choosing individuals of superior
overall genetic quality (shaded area)
(from Kodric-Brown and Brown 1984).
-
Advantage to females choosing males of high fitness will:
-
Favor evolution of male traits that maintain a high correlation between
phenotypic expression & genetic quality
-
Favor evolution of females that exhibit discrimination in choice of mates
-
Predictions or consequences of the Truth in Advertising model:
-
Sexually selected traits ---> highly correlated with phenotypic vigor &
components of fitness like growth rate, predator avoidance, disease- &
parasite-resistance, & competitive ability
-
Traits ---> costly (expression requires expenditure of limited energy that
could be allocated to other structures & functions
-
Genotype-environment interactions should enhance effect of sexual selection
& contribute significantly to observed variation among males in sexual
traits
-
Fitness of both male & female offspring should be positively correlated
with degree of 'expression' in father
-
Many organisms:
-
Both male-male competition & female choice important in sexual selection,
& same traits should often be employed in both intermale contests &
courtship
-
Use of traits in contests with other males helps maintain 'honesty'
-
When several traits are important in sexual selection, expression should
be highly correlated among males
-
Exaggerated male traits ---> may aid in intraspecific competition for limited
resources like food & shelter
-
Important point ---> Traits that advertise male genetic quality
need not reflect a trade-off between enhanced reproductive success and
reduced survival (i.e., need not be 'handicaps' in the sense of Zahavi)
CONCLUSION ---> Choice for good genes?? Probably . . . as
long as 'genes' are expressed in a condition-dependent manner
V - Choice for resources and/or high status
Where one sex possesses resources necessary for reproductive success,
individuals of the other sex may show preferences based on quality of resources.
Experimental evidence:
Wells (1977) - Green
frogs (Rana clamitans)
-
Females chose males with territories that contain dense vegetation in which
to lay eggs
Cronin & Sherman (1976) - Orange-rumped Honeyguide
-
Females tend to choose males with territories in which bee nests are located
(feed preferentially on honey & larvae in such nests)
Jones (1981) - Wrasse
(Pseudolabrus celidotus)
Females tend to choose males with territories in deeper water where
eggs are most safe from predators
Choice for high status ---> Advantages:
-
Immediate - able to mate without interruption by other males
-
Progeny may benefit from father's high status through greater parental
care & protection
-
Possible genetic advantage - provided that a male's ability to assume high
status has some genetic basis
Experimental evidence:
-
Breed et al. (1980) - Cockroaches (Nauphoeta cinerea)
-
Dominant males mate more often than subordinate males because:
-
dominant males are more active & encounter females more frequently
-
Females are able to discriminate between dominant & subordinate males
by odor
-
Cox & LeBoeuf (1977):
-
Elephant
seal (Mirounga angustirostris) - Females more likely to make
a vocal protest when mounted by a low-ranking male & such protests
attract other males who attempt to displace him
-
Net effect = makes mating by dominant males more likely
-
West et al. (1981) - Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater)
-
Females induced to solicit copulation by male song & dominant males
sing more 'potent' songs than subordinates
-
Why sing a less potent song? Dominant males attack submissive males
that sing 'potent' songs (isolated males will develop more potent songs)
See article - Should
females prefer dominant males? by Anna Qvarnströma and Elisabet
Forsgren
Strategies of female mate choice
Given: Females may base choice on one, or some combination, of
the aforementioned characteristics (e.g., fecundity, parental ability,
complementarity, good genes, resources, and high status).
Questions:
-
How does a female find the best possible male?
-
How long should a female search?
-
Should males be judged against a fixed standard or by relative criteria?
With no constraints, a female's best strategy would be to inspect all
available males & mate with the best one!
However, females will usually be operating under one or more constraints:
-
Time - females limited by last date at which they can initiate breeding
& still be maximally successful; this will limit the number of males
they can evaluate
-
Mobility - Females may not be able to transverse habitat easily enough
to find all available males
-
population may be fragmented into subpopulations isolated by unsuitable
habitat
-
other potential barriers, e.g., currents (fish), predators, & strong
prevailing winds (flying insects)
-
Memory - probably only 1 or a few males can be remembered at any one time,
& none for very long
A Possible Model for Female Mate Choice (Janetos 1980):
Assumptions:
-
Females mate only once
-
Males may mate more than once & a male's fitness does not decline as
he accumulates mates
-
Males are dispersed in space such that they are encountered randomly with
respect to fitness
-
Males cannot predict where & when a female will arrive
-
Males are unable to manipulate one another or females to increase chance
of mating
-
Fitness of males ranges from 0 to 1 (mean = 0.5)
Possible female strategies:
-
Random mating
-
female mates w/ first male encountered
-
little time & movement & no memory required
-
average fitness of male chose will, on average, be same as population mean
-
Fixed standard
-
Judge males against a fixed standard & choose 1st one above that (but
can't go back to previous males)
-
Females choose only males above 'fitness standard' UNTIL they run out of
time ---> then must choose next available male (i.e., choose randomly)
-
One-step decision process
-
Females initially have high standard that is gradually relaxed as they
run out of time (& can't go back to previous males)
-
Females should only mate & end search if male on hand is better than
they could expect to find by continuing to search (until they run out of
time)
-
Best-of-n-males
-
rank males on relative basis & choose the best
-
requires memory of male quality & locations & mobility (to return
to previously encountered male)
RESULTS:
-
How many males should a female examine?
-
Benefit = fitness of male ---> negatively accelerating function
for all options
-
Costs:
-
Risk of predation during search
-
Searching requires energy that could be used to produce or nourish young
-
Time - may get too late to successfully raise young
So, COST = SOME INCREASING FUNCTION OF n (no. of males examined)
So, how many? By any system, females need only examine a few males to ensure
that they mate with males whose fitness is well above average.
The expected fitness of males chosen by each strategy
as a function of n, the
number of males that the female can encounter. Male fitness
is described by
a uniform distribution on the interval [0, 1] (Janetos
1980).
Value of model:
-
Probably cannot be applied completely to living species (because of false
assumptions)
-
Shows the constraints on female behavior & shows that even simple forms
of female choice can yield large benefits
Literature Cited:
Alexander, R.D., J. Hoogland, R. Howard, K. Noonan, and
P. Sherman. 1979. Sexual dimorphism and breeding systems in pinnipeds,
ungulates, primates, and humans. In Evolutionary biology and human social
behavior (N. Chagnon and W. Irons, eds.). Duxbury, N. Scituate, MA.
Andersson, M. 1982. Female choice selects for extreme
tail length in a widowbird. Nature 299:818-820.
Barash, D.P. 1982. Sociobiology and behavior, second ed.
Elsevier, New York.
Bateson, P. P. G. 1980. Optimal outbreeding and the development
of sexual preferences in Japanese quail. Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie
53: 231-244.
Beecher, M. & I. Beecher. 1979. Sociobiology of Bank
Swallows: reproductive strategy of the male. Science 205:1282-1285.
Breed, M.D., S. Smith, & B.G. Gall. 1980. Systems
of mate selection in a cockroach with male dominance hierarchies. Anim.
Behav. 28:130-134.
Clutton-Brock, T. H. and G.A. Parker. 1995. Sexual coercion
in animal societies. Animal Behaviour 49:1345-1365.
Coulson, J.C. 1966. The influence of the pair-bond on
the breeding biology of the Kittiwake gull. J. Anim. Ecol. 35:269-279.
Cox, C.R. & B.J. LeBoeuf. 1977. Female incitation
of male competition: a mechanism in sexual selection. Am. Nat. 111:317-335.
Craig, G. 1967. Mosquitos: female monogamy induced by
male accessory gland substance. Science 156:1499-1501.
Cronin, E.W., Jr. and P.W. Sherman. 1976. A resource-based
mating system: the Orange-rumped Honeyguide. Living Bird 15:5-32
Fisher, R.A. 1930. The genetical theory of natural selection.
Clarendon Press, Oxford.
Gwynne, D.T. 1981. Sexual difference theory: Mormon crickets
(Anabrus simplex) show role reversal in mate choice. Science 213:
779-780.
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Related, & interesting, links:
Advantage
of Sex
Sexual
Selection in Birds
Sexual Selection
and the Biology of Beauty
Evolution
of Sex and Sexual Selection
Female
Sexual Selection: Part 1
Female
Sexual Selection: Part 2
Mate
Choice
Mating
Systems & Parental Care
Neoteny
and Two-way Sexual Selection in Human Evolution
Hidden
Biases and Sexual Selection
Sex
and Sex Ratios
Sex
is best when you lose your head
Why
are there only two sexes?
Back
to Behavioral Ecology syllabus