Search results for "inferential fallacy"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Assortative mating by size without a size-based preference: the female-sooner norm as a mate-guarding criterion.

2013

7 pages; International audience; The study of size-assortative mating, or homogamy, is of great importance in speciation and sexual selection. However, the proximate mechanisms that lead to such patterns are poorly understood. Homogamy is often thought to come from a directional preference for larger mates. However, many constraints affect mating preferences and understanding the causes of size assortment requires a precise evaluation of the pair formation mechanism. Mate-guarding crustaceans are a model group for the study of homogamy. Males guard females until moult and reproduction. They are also unable to hold a female during their own moult and tend to pair with females closer to moult…

0106 biological sciencestime left to moultamplexusBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencessize-assortative matingAmplexus[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyMate guarding05 social sciencesAssortative matingstate-dependent preferenceDecision ruleMating preferencesmale mate choicePair formationinferential fallacymale-taller normSexual selectionAnimal Science and ZoologyNorm (social)[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologycrustaceanSocial psychology[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis
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Overestimation of the strength of size-assortative pairing in taxa with cryptic diversity: a case of Simpson's paradox.

2015

5 pages; International audience; Size-assortative pairing is one of the most common pairing patterns observed in nature and it probably occurs in many taxa with cryptic diversity. Observed patterns of size-assortative pairing in natural populations may thus be influenced by the co-occurrence of noninterbreeding cryptic groups of individuals living in sympatry. To quantify this potential bias, we sampled amphipods from the Gammarus pulex/Gammarus fossarum crustacean species complex in rivers containing two sympatric and morphologically cryptic groups, i.e. molecular operational taxonomic units (MOTUs). Within each river, MOTUs did not interbreed and differed in mean body size. We measured th…

SympatrySpecies complex[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologybiologymolecular operational taxonomic unitecological fallacyZoologybiology.organism_classificationGammarus pulexTaxoninferential fallacyhomogamySympatric speciationPairingSexual selection[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosissexual selectionAnimal Science and ZoologyMating[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyamphipodEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis
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