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showing 10 items of 2973 documents

Sexual selection for genetic quality: disentangling the roles of male and female behaviour

2009

According to the good genes model of sexual selection, females choose males of good heritable genetic quality to obtain offspring with high fitness. However, better mating success of high-quality males can also be brought about by direct interference competition between males, or simply through elevated activity of high-quality males. We examined the roles of different processes leading to sexual selection for genetic quality in Drosophila montana. We manipulated genetic quality of male flies by inducing mutations with ionizing radiation. We then recorded the effects of inherited heterozygous mutations on several aspects of mating behaviour of males and females in two experiments. We found …

GeneticsMutationOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectfungiBiologymedicine.disease_causeGenetic determinismCourtshipMate choiceSexual selectionmedicineAnimal Science and ZoologyMatingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)media_commonAnimal Behaviour
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Males Benefit from Mating with Outbred Females in Drosophila littoralis: Male Choice for Female Genetic Quality?

2015

The evolution and expression of mate choice behaviour in either sex depends on the sex-specific combination of mating costs, benefits of choice and constraints on choice. If the benefits of choice are larger for one sex, we would expect that sex to be choosier, assuming that the mating costs and constraints on choice are equal between sexes. Because deliberate inbreeding is a powerful genetic method for experimental manipulation of the quality of study organisms, we tested the effects of both male and female inbreeding on egg and offspring production in Drosophila littoralis. Female inbreeding significantly reduced offspring production (mostly due to lower egg-to-adult viability), whereas m…

GeneticsOffspringZoologyBiologyAffect (psychology)Drosophila littoralisMate choiceSexual selectionInbreeding depressionta1181sexual selectionAnimal Science and ZoologyMatingfemale choiceInbreedingEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsinbreeding depressionEthology
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On the resolution of the lek paradox.

2007

Directional female mate choice is expected to deplete additive genetic variation in male traits. This should preclude such trait-based choice from resulting in genetic benefits to offspring, and yet genetic benefits are the explanation for the choice. This evolutionary conundrum is known as the lek paradox. Newly proposed resolutions to this paradox aim to unravel mechanisms that contribute to the persistence of genetic variance in traits under directional female mate choice.

GeneticsPersistence (psychology)MaleModels GeneticOffspringGenetic VariationBiologyMating Preference AnimalMate choiceGenetic variationTraitAnimalsFemaleSelection GeneticEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTrends in ecologyevolution
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Inbreeding rate modifies the dynamics of genetic load in small populations

2012

The negative fitness consequences of close inbreeding are widely recognized, but predicting the long-term effects of inbreeding and genetic drift due to limited population size is not straightforward. As the frequency and homozygosity of recessive deleterious alleles increase, selection can remove (purge) them from a population, reducing the genetic load. At the same time, small population size relaxes selection against mildly harmful mutations, which may lead to accumulation of genetic load. The efficiency of purging and the accumulation of mutations both depend on the rate of inbreeding (i.e., population size) and on the nature of mutations. We studied how increasing levels of inbreeding …

GeneticsPopulation fragmentationEcologyDrosophila littoralisextinctionPopulation sizeGenetic purgingBiologyGenetic loadsymbols.namesakeGenetic driftpurgingInbreeding depressionsymbolsoffspring productionta1181genetic driftInbreedingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOriginal ResearchNature and Landscape ConservationAllee effectinbreeding depression
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Offspring performance is linked to parental identity and male breeding ornamentation in whitefish

2009

The ‘good genes’ hypothesis predicts that males advertise their quality with different sexual ornaments and that females are able to recognize the genetic quality of males by evaluating these characteristics. In the present study, we investigated the parental effects on offspring performance (feeding and swimming ability of newly-hatched larvae) and examined whether male ornamentation indicates offspring success in performance trials of whitefish (Coregonus lavaretus Linnaeus). Offspring first-feeding success had a strong paternal effect and it was also positively correlated with the size of male breeding tubercles, indicating that breeding ornamentation of males can function as an honest i…

GeneticsbiologyOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectMaternal effectZoologyHeritabilitybiology.organism_classificationMating preferencesSexual selectionTraitCoregonusReproductionEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonBiological Journal of the Linnean Society
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Why do female bank voles, Clethrionomys glareolus, mate multiply?

2007

Females of many species actively engage in multiple mating, with either a single male or several males, but the adaptive function of this behaviour is often unclear. We conducted a laboratory experiment on a small mammal species, the bank vole, testing the possible benefits of multiple mating on a female's short-term reproductive success (pregnancy rate, litter size and early postnatal survival). Such benefits may affect a female's fitness either directly or indirectly (genetic benefit). We assigned females to three treatments: a single mating treatment in which females mated once with a single male and two multiple mating treatments in which females mated either twice with a single male or…

GeneticsbiologyReproductive successOffspringAntagonistic CoevolutionZoologybiology.organism_classificationBank volePregnancy rateInduced ovulationbehavior and behavior mechanismsAnimal Science and ZoologyLaboratory experimentreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsClethrionomys glareolusAnimal Behaviour
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2015

Competition over access to reproductive opportunities can lead males to harm females. However, recent work has shown that, in Drosophila melanogaster, male competition and male harm of females are both reduced under conditions simulating male-specific population viscosity (i.e., in groups where males are related and reared with each other as larvae). Here, we seek to replicate these findings and investigate whether male population viscosity can have repercussions for the fitness of offspring in the next generation. We show that groups of unrelated-unfamiliar (i.e., unrelated individuals raised apart) males fight more intensely than groups of related-familiar males (i.e., full siblings raise…

Geneticseducation.field_of_studyEcologyKin recognitionOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectfungiSirePopulationMaternal effectKin selectionBiologyCompetition (biology)Sexual conflicteducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonDemographyEcology and Evolution
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Genomic conflicts and sexual antagonism in human health: Insights from oxytocin and testosterone

2015

We review the hypothesized and observed effects of two of the major forms of genomic conflicts, genomic imprinting and sexual antagonism, on human health. We focus on phenotypes mediated by peptide and steroid hormones (especially oxytocin and testosterone) because such hormones centrally mediate patterns of physical and behavioral resource allocation that underlie both forms of conflict. In early development, a suite of imprinted genes modulates the human oxytocinergic system as predicted from theory, with paternally inherited gene expression associated with higher oxytocin production, and increased solicitation to mothers by infants. This system is predicted to impact health through the i…

Geneticskinship theoryReviews and SynthesisBiologygenomic imprintingSexual dimorphismSexual conflictparental antagonismsexual conflictsexual antagonismGeneticsta1181EpigeneticsAlleleParent–offspring conflictGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolutionary dynamicsGenomic imprintingEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsparent–offspring conflictMaladaptationEvolutionary Applications
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Breeding Geoffroy's cat in captivity

1975

Geoffroy's catCaptivityZoologyBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationInternational Zoo Yearbook
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Flash-flooding of Ephemeral Streams in the Context of Climate Change

2021

Ephemeral streams, which are more extended than expected, entail a significant flood risk. Historically they have been underestimated due to their intermittent flow and the lack of knowledge on their hydro-geomorphology. Currently, European legislation recognizes their associated risk and supports research into them, adapting the scale and methodology to their characteristics. Based on the compilation of various works carried out in four Valencian catchments (Eastern Spain), this paper approaches the key questions of rainfall-runoff conversion and flood generation in ephemeral streams, taking into account their hydro-geomorphological specificity. Moreover, the consequences which derive from…

Geography (General)Flood mythinundation riskGeography Planning and DevelopmentClimate changemediterraneanContext (language use)environmental changeEnvironmental Science (miscellaneous)Flood controlEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Flash floodEnvironmental scienceG1-922PrecipitationWater cycleintermittent riversSurface runoffWater resource managementCuadernos de Investigación Geográfica
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