scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Jane Reid | Q34776029 |
P2093 | author name string | Greta Bocedi | |
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Does multiple paternity improve fitness of the frog Crinia georgiana? | Q28143222 | ||
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Sex peptide causes mating costs in female Drosophila melanogaster | Q28236144 | ||
Female extrapair mating behavior can evolve via indirect selection on males | Q28240599 | ||
Extra-pair paternity in birds: explaining variation between species and populations | Q28303340 | ||
Sexual conflict | Q29392649 | ||
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Trade-offs and the evolution of life-histories during range expansion | Q33662502 | ||
Why do females mate multiply? A review of the genetic benefits | Q33877784 | ||
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Postcopulatory sexual selection | Q34609891 | ||
The sexually-selected sperm hypothesis: sex-biased inheritance and sexual antagonism | Q34677516 | ||
Runaway ornament diversity caused by Fisherian sexual selection | Q34746936 | ||
Partitioning sexual selection into its mating success and fertilization success components | Q35750918 | ||
The strength of indirect selection on female mating preferences | Q35995071 | ||
THE EVOLUTION OF COSTLY MATE PREFERENCES II. THE "HANDICAP" PRINCIPLE. | Q53246092 | ||
GOOD GENES AND DIRECT SELECTION IN THE EVOLUTION OF MATING PREFERENCES. | Q53713484 | ||
SEXUAL SELECTION AND THE EVOLUTION OF FEMALE CHOICE. | Q54018405 | ||
UNIFYING GENETIC MODELS FOR THE EVOLUTION OF FEMALE CHOICE. | Q54564325 | ||
INFERENCE OF SPERM COMPETITION FROM BROODS OF FIELD-CAUGHT DROSOPHILA. | Q54640712 | ||
Quantitative genetic evidence that males trade attractiveness for ejaculate quality in guppies. | Q55498819 | ||
SPERM COMPETITION AND ITS EVOLUTIONARY CONSEQUENCES IN THE INSECTS | Q55878159 | ||
The Lek Paradox and the Capture of Genetic Variance by Condition Dependent Traits | Q55895821 | ||
A "Good-Sperm" Model Can Explain the Evolution of Costly Multiple Mating by Females | Q55980264 | ||
Sexual Selection: The Handicap Principle Does Work -- Sometimes | Q56227338 | ||
Sexually transmitted diseases in polygynous mating systems: prevalence and impact on reproductive success | Q56432232 | ||
Unifying and Testing Models of Sexual Selection | Q56656959 | ||
Why Do Females Mate with Multiple Males? The Sexually Selected Sperm Hypothesis | Q56815445 | ||
Measuring mate choice using correlation: the effect of female sampling behaviour | Q56827957 | ||
The Evolution of Infidelity in Socially Monogamous Passerines: The Strength of Direct and Indirect Selection on Extrapair Copulation Behavior in Females | Q56854196 | ||
The Evolution of Costly Mate Preferences I. Fisher and Biased Mutation | Q57065637 | ||
Evolutionary quantitative genetics of sperm | Q57275171 | ||
Material and genetic benefits of female multiple mating and polyandry | Q57724729 | ||
Repeatability and heritability of sperm competition outcomes in males and females of Tribolium castaneum | Q57920841 | ||
Sexual conflict and indirect benefits | Q60492186 | ||
SEXUAL SELECTION AND THE EVOLUTION OF COSTLY FEMALE PREFERENCES: SPATIAL EFFECTS | Q60492208 | ||
Effect of inbreeding and heritability of sperm competition success in the bulb mite Rhizoglyphus robini | Q60542807 | ||
The maintenance of genetic variability by mutation in a polygenic character with linked loci | Q67384938 | ||
The costs of choice in sexual selection | Q68542722 | ||
Sympatric speciation by sexual selection | Q73256437 | ||
Predicting long-term response to selection | Q73601694 | ||
Male-by-female interactions influence fertilization success and mediate the benefits of polyandry in the sea urchin Heliocidaris erythrogramma | Q81578500 | ||
Fertilization success and the estimation of genetic variance in sperm competitiveness | Q85110027 | ||
The sociobiology of sex: inclusive fitness consequences of inter-sexual interactions | Q36081180 | ||
Quantitative genetic correlation between trait and preference supports a sexually selected sperm process. | Q36082321 | ||
A stochastic model concerning the maintenance of genetic variability in quantitative characters | Q36378573 | ||
Quantitative genetic models of sexual selection | Q36479156 | ||
The genetic basis of female multiple mating in a polyandrous livebearing fish | Q36599832 | ||
Polyandry as a mediator of sexual selection before and after mating | Q36622099 | ||
Selection on female remating interval is influenced by male sperm competition strategies and ejaculate characteristics | Q36622109 | ||
The consequences of polyandry for population viability, extinction risk and conservation | Q36622143 | ||
Polyandry: the history of a revolution | Q36622147 | ||
Male genetic quality and the inequality between paternity success and fertilization success: consequences for studies of sperm competition and the evolution of polyandry | Q37100246 | ||
Mate choice and sexual selection: what have we learned since Darwin? | Q37243342 | ||
Sperm competition and ejaculate economics. | Q37766254 | ||
Do male secondary sexual characters signal ejaculate quality? A meta-analysis | Q38078466 | ||
Polyandry in nature: a global analysis. | Q38211983 | ||
Are there indirect fitness benefits of female extra-pair reproduction? Lifetime reproductive success of within-pair and extra-pair offspring | Q38424331 | ||
Copulation dynamics. Out for the sperm count | Q38601599 | ||
Evolutionary modeling predicts a decrease in postcopulatory sperm viability as a response to increasing levels of sperm competition. | Q39629101 | ||
Sperm in competition: not playing by the numbers | Q40325338 | ||
The polyandry revolution | Q43244467 | ||
Structural instability of models of sexual selection | Q43684929 | ||
Post-mating sexual selection increases lifetime fitness of polyandrous females in the wild | Q47577419 | ||
FEMALE CONTROL OF SPERM TRANSFER AND INTRASPECIFIC VARIATION IN SPERM PRECEDENCE: ANTECEDENTS TO THE EVOLUTION OF A COURTSHIP FOOD GIFT. | Q47673843 | ||
Female polyandry affects their sons' reproductive success in the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum | Q49561462 | ||
Covariance among premating, post-copulatory and viability fitness components in Drosophila melanogaster and their influence on paternity measurement | Q50496919 | ||
Polyandrous females produce sons that are successful at post-copulatory competition | Q51161713 | ||
Mechanisms of sperm competition: Linking physiology and behavioural ecology | Q51212561 | ||
Indirect selection on female extra-pair reproduction? Comparing the additive genetic value of maternal half-sib extra-pair and within-pair offspring. | Q51384650 | ||
Estimating genetic benefits of polyandry from experimental studies: a meta-analysis. | Q51467650 | ||
Male fecundity stimulation: conflict and cooperation within and between the sexes: model analyses and coevolutionary dynamics. | Q51596577 | ||
A new theory for the evolution of polyandry as a means of inbreeding avoidance. | Q51702904 | ||
Maternal inheritance, epigenetics and the evolution of polyandry. | Q51703871 | ||
Colourful male guppies produce faster and more viable sperm. | Q51790801 | ||
The evolution of female preferences for multiple indicators of quality. | Q52088424 | ||
THE EVOLUTION OF COSTLY MATE PREFERENCES I. FISHER AND BIASED MUTATION. | Q52442296 | ||
Evolution of ejaculates: patterns of phenotypic and genotypic variation and condition dependence in sperm competition traits. | Q52599531 | ||
Experimental Evidence for the Evolution of Numerous, Tiny Sperm via Sperm Competition | Q52605640 | ||
Superior sperm competitors sire higher-quality young. | Q52640999 | ||
The evolution of polyandry: patterns of genotypic variation in female mating frequency, male fertilization success and a test of the sexy-sperm hypothesis. | Q52641724 | ||
Maternal effects, but no good or compatible genes for sperm competitiveness in Australian crickets. | Q52700307 | ||
Mechanisms of sperm competition. | Q52713806 | ||
A novel test of the phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis reveals independent components of fertility. | Q52859335 | ||
Directional postcopulatory sexual selection revealed by artificial insemination. | Q52947676 | ||
P433 | issue | 1 | |
P1104 | number of pages | 20 | |
P304 | page(s) | 39-58 | |
P577 | publication date | 2014-11-28 | |
P1433 | published in | Evolution | Q4038411 |
P1476 | title | Evolution of female multiple mating: A quantitative model of the "sexually selected sperm" hypothesis | |
P478 | volume | 69 |
Q50939035 | Additive genetic variance in polyandry enables its evolution, but polyandry is unlikely to evolve through sexy or good sperm processes |
Q58112309 | An Inconvenient Truth: The Unconsidered Benefits of Convenience Polyandry |
Q50926321 | Behavioral Analysis and Ethogram of Mating in the Wasp Sphex latreillei (Lepeletier) (Hymenoptera: Crabronidae). |
Q47617628 | Evolution of precopulatory and post-copulatory strategies of inbreeding avoidance and associated polyandry |
Q57143836 | Is there indirect selection on female extra-pair reproduction through cross-sex genetic correlations with male reproductive fitness? |
Q64923447 | No support for the sexy-sperm hypothesis in the seed beetle: Sons of monandrous females fare better in post-copulatory competition. |
Q52568241 | Nonadaptive female pursuit of extrapair copulations can evolve through hitchhiking. |
Q92101497 | Recent immigrants alter the quantitative genetic architecture of paternity in song sparrows |
Q37316582 | When does female multiple mating evolve to adjust inbreeding? Effects of inbreeding depression, direct costs, mating constraints, and polyandry as a threshold trait. |
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