Search results for "Sexual selectio"

showing 10 items of 255 documents

Similar Performance of Diploid and Haploid Males in an Ant Species without Inbreeding Avoidance

2013

AbstractUnder haplodiploidy, a characteristic trait of all Hymenoptera, femalesdevelop from fertilised eggs, and males from unfertilised ones. Males aretherefore typically haploid. Yet, inbreeding can lead to the production ofdiploid males that often fail in development, are sterile or are of lowerfertility. In most Hymenoptera, inbreeding is avoided by dispersal flightsof one or both sexes, leading to low diploid male loads. We investigatedcauses for the production of diploid males and their performance in ahighly inbred social Hymenopteran species. In the ant Hypoponera opacior,inbreeding occurs between wingless sexuals, which mate within themother nest, whereas winged sexuals outbreed dur…

GeneticsOutbreeding depressionfungiZoologyHymenopteraBiologybiology.organism_classificationNestSexual selectionHaplodiploidyInbreeding avoidanceAnimal Science and ZoologyMatingInbreedingreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEthology
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Genic capture and resolving the lek paradox

2006

The genic capture hypothesis offers a resolution to the question of how genetic variation in male sexually selected traits is maintained in the face of strong female preferences. The hypothesis is that male display traits are costly to produce and hence depend upon overall condition, which itself is dependent upon genes at many loci. Few attempts have been made to test the assumptions and predictions of the genic capture hypothesis rigorously and, in particular, little attention has been paid to determining the genetic basis of condition. Such tests are crucial to our understanding of the maintenance of genetic variation and in the evaluation of recent models that propose a role for sexual …

GeneticsSexual selectionGenetic variationGenic captureBiologyTrait expressionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTrends in Ecology & Evolution
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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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Sexual selection and intelligence: Does sexual reproduction drive the evolution of intelligence?

2009

Abstract The basal hypothesis discussed here is the idea that brain architecture could be plastic on a very basal, genetic level due to sexual recombination and reassortment of alleles of genes related to brain development, e.g., neuronal cell adhesion molecules (NCAMs) and others. The role of sexual reassortment leads the study of brain development, species behavior and intelligence to a new version of the so-called “Red Queen Hypothesis”: using the mechanism described here, a kind of runaway selection mechanism seems to arise. Even if NCAMs are almost constant within an individual, they seem to act very differently at the population level and so the role of reassorting polymorphic NCAM- (…

Geneticseducation.field_of_studyMechanism (biology)ReassortmentEvolution of human intelligencePopulationMedicine (miscellaneous)BiologyAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)Sexual reproductionnervous systemRed Queen hypothesisSexual selectioneducationSelection (genetic algorithm)Bioscience Hypotheses
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Differential competitive ability between sexes in the dioecious Antennaria dioica (Asteraceae)

2012

† Background and Aims Differences in competitive ability between the sexes of dioecious plants are expected as a result of allocation trade-offs associated with sex-differential reproductive costs. However, the available data on competitive ability in dioecious plants are scarce and contradictory. In this study sexual competition was eval- uated using the dioecious plant Antennaria dioica in a common garden transplantation experiment. † Methods Male and female plants were grown for 3 years either in isolation, or in competition with a plant of the same sex or the opposite sex. Flowering phenology, sexual and asexual reproduction, plant growth, nutrient content and arbuscular mycorrhizal col…

Genotypemedia_common.quotation_subjectAntennaria dioicaAsexual reproductionPlant ScienceFlowersBiologyAsteraceaePlant RootsCompetition (biology)Life history theoryMycorrhizaeReproduction AsexualBiomassSymbiosismedia_commonEcologyReproductionfungiFungifood and beveragesNiche segregationArticlesbiology.organism_classificationTransplantationPhenotypeSexual selectionReproductionPlant Shoots
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Intelligence can be detected but is not found attractive in videos and live interactions

2021

Humans’ extraordinary intelligence seems to extend beyond the needs for survival. One theory to explain this surplus intelligence is that it evolved via sexual selection as a fitness indicator to advertise genetic quality to prospective mates. Consistent with this idea, self-reported mate preferences suggest intelligence is valued across cultures. Yet, as the validity of these self-reports has been questioned, it remains unclear whether objectively assessed intelligence is indeed attractive. We analysed data from two studies to test this key premise of the sexual selection theory of intelligence. In Study 1, 88 target men had their intelligence measured and based on short video clips were r…

Human intelligence05 social sciencesPhysical attractivenessAppeal050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAttraction050105 experimental psychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Mate choiceSexual selectionTrait0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologySocial psychologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution and Human Behavior
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Microhabitat selection and audible sexual signalling in the wolf spider Hygrolycosa rubrofasciata (Araneae, Lycosidae)

2000

We studied the microhabitat selection and male sexual signalling behaviour in the wolf spider Hygrolycosa rubrofasciata (Ohlert). Males strike dry leaves with their abdomen, producing an audible sexual drumming signal, and females use this signal to choose mating partners. In the field we followed male drum- ming rate and microhabitat selection using both the mark-recapture method and direct observations. In the laboratory we conducted an experiment on male micro- habitat and drumming substrate selection. We found that in the field males were not distributed randomly among the habitat; fewer males were found in areas that had high sedge cover, low elevation, and low dry leaf cover. In the l…

Hygrolycosa rubrofasciataHabitatEcologySexual selectionWolf spiderAnimal Science and ZoologyLaboratory experimentBiologyMatingbiology.organism_classificationSubstrate (marine biology)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)Acta ethologica
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Sexual selection in the wolf spider Hygrolycosa rubrofasciata: female preference for drum duration and pulse rate

2002

The unusual form of sexual signaling, the drumming produced by the wolf spider Hygrolycosa rubrofasciata, allows exceptionally detailed studies of female preference patterns against signal characteristics. It is easy to manipulate the signals and to use large numbers of females in playback experiments. Males of H. rubrofasciata produce drums by striking their abdomen against dry leaves on the ground. Drums travel not only as substrate-borne vibrations, but also as airborne acoustic signals. Females respond sooner to drums transferred as substrate borne, but the mode of signal transfer has no effect on female preference for different types of drums. We investigated the effects of two key com…

Hygrolycosa rubrofasciatabiologyWolf spiderSupernormal stimulusZoologyAnatomyDrumbiology.organism_classificationPreferenceMate choiceDuration (music)Sexual selectionAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBehavioral Ecology
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Discussion

1999

Homo sapiens L. has been described as the naked ape, and this nakedness undoubtedly constitutes one of the most striking differences in appearance between man and the apes. Nakedness has been attributed at various times to sexual selection [1], aquatic stage [2], hunting [3], cooling [4], sex [5], neoteny [6] and allometry [7], most proposed explanations logically revealing some aspect of the phenomenon. However, most fail to account for the distinctiveness of man's hairlessness among mammals of the same size. Unfortunately, fossils cannot help us to explain how denudation occurred, and how it helped hominids to survive. In this paper I will present an old hypothesis with a new point of vie…

Infectious DiseasesbiologyHomo sapiensHominidaeEvolutionary biologySexual selectionZoologyParasitologyOptimal distinctiveness theoryBiological evolutionAdaptationbiology.organism_classificationNeotenyInternational Journal for Parasitology
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Why Do Black Grouse Males Perform on Lek Sites outside the Breeding Season?

1999

Studies of sexual selection have focused mainly on explanations of how male characteristics influence mating success during the breeding season. By contrast, few studies have investigated how behaviours prior to the breeding season influence mate choice d

Lek matingMate choicebiologyEcologySexual selectionSeasonal breederAnimal Science and ZoologyMatingBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Avian Biology
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