Authors
Matthew JG Gage, Geoffrey A Parker, Soren Nylin, Christer Wiklund
Publication date
2002/11/22
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
Volume
269
Issue
1507
Pages
2309-2316
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Recently refined evolutionary theories propose that sexual selection and reproductive conflict could be drivers of speciation. Male and female reproductive optima invariably differ because the potential reproductive rate of males almost always exceeds that of females: females are selected to maximize mate ‘quality’, while males can increase fitness through mate ‘quantity’. A dynamic, sexually selected conflict therefore exists in which ‘competitive’ males are selected to override the preference tactics evolved by ‘choosy’ females. The wide variation across taxa in mating systems therefore generates variance in the outcome of intrasexual conflict and the strength of sexual selection: monandry constrains reproductive heterozygosity and allows female choice to select and maintain particular (preferred) genes; polyandry promotes reproductive heterozygosity and will more likely override female choice. Two different …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MJG Gage, GA Parker, S Nylin, C Wiklund - Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B …, 2002