Authors
AP Moller, P Christe, E Lux
Publication date
1999/3/1
Source
The Quarterly Review of Biology
Volume
74
Issue
1
Pages
3-20
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Description
Parasite-mediated sexual selection may arise as a consequence of 1) females avoiding mates with directly transmitted parasites, 2) females choosing less-parasitized males that provide parental care of superior quality, or 3) females choosing males with few parasites in order to obtain genes for parasite resistance in their offspring. Studies of specific host-parasite systems and comparative analyses have revealed both supportive and conflicting evidence for these hypotheses. A meta-analysis of the available evidence revealed a negative relationship between parasite load and the expression of male secondary sexual characters. Experimental studies yielded more strongly negative relationships than observations did, and the relationships were more strongly negative for ectoparasites than for endoparasites. There was no significant difference in the magnitude of the negative effect for species with and without male …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AP Moller, P Christe, E Lux - The Quarterly Review of Biology, 1999