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1.
Differential interests between the sexes regarding the number of copulations can result in sexual harassment. Hence, females
may have less time available for foraging. Male sexual harassment often leads to fitness reduction in females. We used the
mating complex of the bisexual fish Poecilia mexicana and the co-occurring all-female Poecilia formosa to study sexual harassment and its incurred cost on female feeding efficiency. P. formosa is a sperm-dependent parthenogen that requires mating with host males to induce embryogenesis, but the male genes are not
used. We therefore predicted P. mexicana males to prefer conspecific females. Hence, costs of male sexual harassment should not occur in unisexuals. While P. formosa are at a disadvantage compared to P. mexicana females due to male mate choice (leading to sperm limitation), this could be traded-off by suffering less from sexual harassment.
In our experiment, we found males to direct significantly more pre-copulatory mating behaviour towards conspecific females,
whereas actual mating attempts did not differ between species. Contrary to our prediction, both types of females started feeding
later and spent less time feeding in the presence of a male partner compared to the time spent feeding with another female,
suggesting that females of both species suffer from male harassment. The focal females' feeding time declined with increasing
body size of the female competitor, and the same pattern was found when a male was present. We discuss that—besides sexual
harassment—other factors such as food competition and female mate choice may affect female feeding efficiency. 相似文献
2.
Male mosquitofish are very persistent in their sexual activity and harass any female they encounter. Gravid females pay a
large tribute to this intense male sexual activity in terms of reduced foraging efficiency. Previous observations have demonstrated
that gravid females, when chased by a male, dilute male harassment by moving closer to other females to form shoals. They
also approach other males to promote male competition, and when males differ in size, they preferentially target large males,
whose harassment is less intense. In this study, we tested whether the modulation of females’ social preferences in response
to male harassment is innate or learned. We tested social preference in three groups of females that differed in experience
of sexual harassment and in the factors affecting it. Females of the first group were reared without any sexual experience,
and pregnancy was induced through artificial insemination. The second group was composed of naive females kept singly with
a male; these females experienced sexual harassment but were prevented from experiencing the effects of male–male competition
and shoaling on the amount of male sexual harassment. In the third group (controls), females were reared in multi-male, multi-female
groups and could experience the modulating effects of social interactions on sexual harassment. When exposed to a harassing
male, females of the three groups immediately reduced their distance from another female, approached a group of males or moved
toward the larger of two available males. Moreover, the results for these three groups of females were similar to those obtained
in wild-caught females that were tested in the same three tests in a previous study (Dadda et al. An. Behav., 70:463–471, 2005). This suggests that the strategies adopted by females in response to male sexual harassment do not need to be learned through
specific experience of the social contexts. 相似文献
3.
Ø. Holand R. B. Weladji K. H. Røed H. Gjøstein J. Kumpula J.-M. Gaillard M. E. Smith M. Nieminen 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2006,59(5):682-688
The manipulation of the sex ratio and age structure in many managed ungulate populations calls for a better understanding
of their potential consequences on females’ condition and behavior during rut. During 1996–2002, we manipulated the male age
structure and male percentage (nine treatments during 7 years) within an experimental herd of semidomestic reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) and investigated their influence on both the body mass change and the behavior of females during rut. On average, the females
lost body mass (−0.95±SE 0.18 kg) during rut, which we contend to reflect somatic costs. The females’ losses increased as
the percentage of male decreased, but this was certainly ascribed to one treatment with high male percentage (27.7%) as compared
to the others (ranging from 3.9 to 12.2%). Female losses were highest for treatments including both young and adult males
as compared to only adult or only young males, and higher for treatments including only young compared to only adult males.
This is supported by (1) the higher female harassment frequency when females are exposed to only young or a mixture of young
and adult males as compared to only adults, (2) the higher female harassment frequency by young males as compared to adults
in the mixed treatments, and (3) the reduced females’ feeding activity in treatments including both young and adult males.
We conclude that the male age structure during rut will influence the females’ behavior and mass change and may have implications
for females’ life history and for population dynamics. 相似文献
4.
Contrary to Bateman’s principle, polyandry appears to be a common female mating strategy. Several hypotheses have been proposed
to explain the evolution of polyandry. It is assumed that females gain either material or genetic benefits from multiple matings,
or that they are coerced into mating by males. In water striders, mating is generally assumed to be costly to females, and
they are thought to mate for reasons of convenience, adjusting their resistance to mating according to male harassment. Here,
we tested the effect of number of matings (with the same male) and number of partners on female fitness in a water strider
Aquarius paludum. In the first experiment, we regulated the time females spent with a male and found that females’ egg production increased
with multiple matings up to a point. The result supports the existence of an optimal female mating frequency. In the second
experiment, we tested how polyandry affects the number of eggs laid and egg hatching success. We conducted three different
trials: females mated four times with either a single male, two different males, or with four different males. Females that
mated with four different males laid the lowest number of eggs and had the lowest egg hatching success, suggesting that polyandry
reduces females’ egg production and egg hatching success in A. paludum. We conclude that A. paludum females probably gain material benefits from mating but no genetic benefits were found in this study. 相似文献
5.
Martin Plath Katja Kromuszczynski Ralph Tiedemann 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2009,63(3):381-390
Males often face strong mating competition by neighboring males in their social environment. A recent study by Plath et al.
(Anim Behav 75:21–29, 2008a) has demonstrated that the visual presence of a male competitor (i.e., an audience male) affects
the expression of male mating preferences in a poeciliid fish (Poecilia mexicana) with a weaker expression of mating preferences when an audience male observed the focal male. This may be a tactic to reduce
sperm competition, since surrounding males likely share intrinsic preferences for female traits or copy mate choice decisions.
Here, we examined the hypothesis that a same-sex audience would affect female mate preferences less than male mating preferences. Our hypothesis was based on the assumptions that (1) competition for
mates in a fashion that would be comparable in strength to sperm competition or overt male–male aggression is absent among
Poecilia females, and (2) P. mexicana females typically form female-biased shoals, such that almost any female mate choice in nature occurs in front of a female
audience. Poecilia females (P. mexicana, surface and cave form, and the closely related gynogenetic Poecilia formosa) were given a choice between a large and a small male, and the tests were repeated while a conspecific, a heterospecific,
or no audience female (control) was presented. Females spent more time in the neutral zone and, thus, less time near the males
during the second part of a trial when an audience was presented, but—consistent with predictions—females showed only slightly
weaker expression of mate preferences during the second part of the tests. This decline was not specific to the treatment
involving an audience and was significantly weaker than the effect seen in the male sex. 相似文献
6.
Sexual coercion is a common behaviour for males trying to compensate for being inferior in male competition and/or female choice. We measured the cost of male sexual harassment for females as reduced feeding time in three populations of the Atlantic molly (Poecilia mexicana). Of these populations, one originated from a typical river habitat, another from a lightless cave chamber and the third one from a small, milky creek outside the cave. We gave hungry females an opportunity to feed in the presence of either another female or a male. We found the following: (1) male sexual harassment represents a cost in the river dwelling population and both small and large males significantly reduce female feeding time; and (2) sexual harassment was not detected in the other two populations (cave and cave entrance). In the cave molly, small males are at a disadvantage in female choice, but predation by an aquatic heteropteran selects against large male body size. 相似文献
7.
Replacement males in the western bluebird: opportunity for paternity, chick-feeding rules, and fitness consequences of male parental care 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
In western bluebirds (Sialia mexicana), most pairs remain together for life and share equally in post-hatching parental care. We removed resident males of socially
monogamous pairs during laying and after clutch completion to examine chick-feeding rules used by replacement males and current
and future fitness consequences of paternal care. Replacement males were not infanticidal and 7 (47%) fed nestlings. Feeding
replacement males and the females they joined fed at rates similar to controls. Females without a feeding replacement male
compensated by feeding more themselves so that overall feeding rates were not compromised, but they reduced their brooding
time. Unlike assisted females, unassisted females exhibited reduced nesting success and their 14-day-old chicks weighed less
than controls. Field metabolic rates of unassisted females were 17% higher than those of control females, but the difference
was not statistically significant. Older females were better able to raise young without the male's help than were yearling
females. Female condition was not affected by male provisioning and unassisted females were as likely to survive to the next
breeding season as assisted females. We found no future benefits of provisioning by replacement males; those that fed were
no more likely to breed with the female on her subsequent attempt than were males that did not feed, and subsequent clutch
sizes were not reduced for females rearing young without the male's help. These experiments suggest that male parental care
increases nesting success in western bluebirds and that replacement males use an all-or-none rule to determine whether or
not to feed chicks: if they are present during the fertile period they feed at typical rates; if they are not, they usually
do not feed at all. Because chick-feeding by males is tied to opportunity for paternity, influences success in the current
nest, and does not affect the male's future breeding success, it appears to be parental rather than mating effort.
Received: 8 May 1998 / Accepted after revision: 23 July 1998 相似文献
8.
Chad C. Smith 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,61(9):1349-1358
Operational sex ratio (the ratio of sexually active males to fertilizable females) has a major influence on male competition
for mates and male–female interactions. The contributions of male and female density per se to mating system dynamics, however,
are rarely examined, and the fitness consequences are often inferred rather than quantified. Male mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis) compete aggressively and frequently harass females for copulations, a behavior thought to reduce female fitness. Female
fitness can also be reduced by increases in female density, which may affect food availability, cannibalism rates, and chemical
interactions between females. I manipulated male and female densities of G. affinis to measure their effects on male–male aggression, male harassment toward females, and female fitness. I found that males
chased rivals more often and attempted fewer copulations when female density decreased, but surprisingly male density had
no significant effect on the frequency of these male behaviors. In contrast, males’ agonistic displays toward other males
increased with male density, but display behavior was unaffected by female density. These results suggest that male and female
density do not always contribute equally or at all to the patterns of behavior we observe. Female fitness declined as female
density increased, the opposite pattern expected if male harassment is costly to females. This suggests that a strong, negative
effect of female density overwhelmed any potential costs of male harassment. Sources of female density dependence and the
consequences of changes in male and female density to patterns of male behavior are discussed. 相似文献
9.
David Bierbach Claudia Kronmarck Carmen Hennige-Schulz Stefan Stadler Martin Plath 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2011,65(9):1699-1707
Mate choice copying was mostly described as a strategy employed by females to assess the quality of potential mates, but also
males can copy other males’ mate choice. An open question in this context is whether and how copying males evaluate sperm
competition risk, as mating with a female that has already copulated with another male obviously sets the stage for intense
sperm competition (i.e., in species with internal fertilization). Using the livebearing Atlantic molly (Poecilia mexicana) as a model, we asked (a) whether males of that species indeed copy other males’ choices, and if they do so, (b) whether
copying males strategically adjust their behavior to sperm competition risk. We used an approach where focal males could first
choose to associate with a large or a small stimulus female. Mate choice tests were then repeated after an “observation phase”
during which either no model male was present (treatment 1, control) or the previously non-preferred female could be seen
associating (treatment 2) or physically interacting (treatment 3) with a model male. We found that, after the observation
phase, males spent considerably more time with the previously non-preferred female in treatment (2), i.e., they copied the
model male’s choice. This effect was much weaker during treatment (3) where sexual interactions between the model male and
the formerly non-preferred female were allowed. Males, therefore, seem to adjust their copying behavior strategically to the
perceived risk of sperm competition. 相似文献
10.
David Bierbach Vanessa Sassmannshausen Bruno Streit Lenin Arias-Rodriguez Martin Plath 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2013,67(4):675-683
Selection imposed by male competition (intrasexual selection) and female choice (intersexual selection) can be con- or discordant. Specifically, females may or may not prefer mating with dominant males, and direct costs of interacting with dominant (and possibly more harassing) males have been suggested to explain avoidance of dominant males. Here, we exemplify that inter- and intrasexual selection may normally act in the same direction, but can be temporarily conflicting when social information becomes available. Using video playback techniques, we presented females of the Mexican livebearing fish Poecilia mexicana with two size-matched males and established association preferences. Half of the females could then observe the same two males fight and establish dominance, while control females saw both males side by side, but physically separated, and female preferences were subsequently re-evaluated. Females in the control group showed a significant preference for future winners in the subsequent testing, confirming an innate or acquired preference for male traits that are indicative of physical superiority, even when body size as a choice criterion is excluded. When allowed to eavesdrop on male fights, however, females did not show a preference for observed winners and even decreased time spent with them relative to the control treatment in which no fight was shown. A subsequent experiment found contest winners to show elevated levels of sexual behavior, so we argue that the temporary offset of the intrinsic female preference for dominant males after having observed a fight is indeed driven by direct costs females expect from more harassing contest winners. 相似文献
11.
Ellen J. Censky 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(4):221-225
Mate choice by females has been documented in a variety of taxa. Female mate choice in species lacking male resource control
or paternal care might occur if preferred males provide protection from harassment. Female mate choice was investigated in
a natural population of the non-territorial lizard Ameiva plei (Teiidae). Consort pairs were allowed to form naturally. Consort males were significantly larger than non-consort males.
After removal of consort males, the “abandoned” female's reaction to the first male who approached her was recorded. Females
rejected all small males. Female preference for large males was significantly higher than preference for small males. Large
males may be better equipped to guard the females from harassment and behavior of large males is less harassing than behavior
of small males, thereby affording the female increased foraging time.
Received: 21 June 1996 / Accepted after revision: 28 December 1996 相似文献
12.
Summary Non-random mating by size (NRMS) plays a central role in the study of sexual selection and the evolution of mating systems. Theory suggests that NRMS should be influenced by conflicting demands (e.g., predation risk, hunger); few experimental studies, however, have addressed these effects. We used a factorial experiment to examine the influence of predatory green sunfish and food deprivation on NRMS in male and female stream water striders, Aquarius remigis. As predicted by theory, food deprivation decreased the large-male mating advantage. The influence of predation risk, however, went against existing theory; that is, risk increased the large male mating advantage. The degree of large-male mating advantage was negatively related to a measure of the rate of male harassment of females. A behavioral mechanism that can explain these patterns emphasizes the contrasting effects of different competing demands on male harassment rates, female resistance and the role of male size in overcoming female resistance. Females usually resist male mating attempts. Successful mating occurs when males overcome female resistance. If harassment rates (of females by males) are low, larger males have a mating advantage over smaller males perhaps because females resist heavily and thus only larger males can overcome female resistance. If, however, male harassment rates are very high, female resistance might be swamped; mating should then be more random with respect to male size. Food deprivation increases gerrid activity and thus increases harassment rates which should then reduce NRMS. In contrast, risk decreases gerrid activity, thus decreasing harassment rates and increasing NRMS. Females did not show significant NRMS. Females did, however, show a pattern of change in NRMS that is consistent with male choice for larger females.
Correspondence to: A. Sih 相似文献
13.
Sexual conflict in the snake den 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
Red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis) court and mate in spring, soon after they emerge from large communal overwintering dens in south-central Manitoba. Because
of a massive bias in the operational sex ratio, every female attracts intense courtship from dozens to hundreds of males.
We suggest that this courtship constitutes significant ”harassment,” because it delays the females’ dispersal from the den
and hence increases their vulnerability to predation. Small females may face the greatest costs, because they are less able
to escape from amorous males (who court all females, even juvenile animals). Our measurements show that males are stronger
and faster than females. Experimental trials confirm that the locomotor ability of females (especially small females) is greatly
reduced by the weight of a courting male. Arena trials show that intense courtship stimulates females to attempt to escape.
Remarkably, some females that are too small to produce offspring may nonetheless copulate. This precocious sexual receptivity
may benefit juvenile females because copulation renders them unattractive to males, and thus allows them to escape more easily
from the den. Female ”tactics” to escape male harassment may explain other puzzling aspects of garter snake biology including
size-assortative mating, temporal patterns in dispersal from the den, avoidance of communal dens by young-of-the-year snakes,
and female mimicry. Hence, sexual conflict may have influenced important features of the mating system and behavioral ecology
of these animals.
Received: 8 May 2000 / Revised: 28 July 2000 / Accepted: 30 July 2000 相似文献
14.
R. Terry Bowyer Janet L. Rachlow Kelley M. Stewart Victor Van Ballenberghe 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2011,65(12):2251-2260
Evidence of female fomentation of male–male aggression as a mechanism of mate choice is rare, especially in mammals. Female
choice of mates in polygynous species may be masked by intense male competition or by males attempting to restrict female
choice. We studied protest moans of female Alaskan moose Alces alces gigas in interior Alaska, USA, from 1987 to 1990, to determine if moans incited male–male aggression. Alaskan moose exhibit a mating
system in which one dominant male (the harem master) herds, defends, courts, and attempts to mate with females in his harem.
Protest moans were given by females only in response to courtship. We hypothesized that if protest moans were related to females
reducing harassment and exercising mate choice, females should give protest moans more frequently when courted by small males
and less often when courted by large males, and that rates of male–male aggression would be elevated following protest moans.
Harems were composed of one large male, with a mean of 4.4 females (median = 3 females); 10% of 132 harems included ≥10 females.
The temporal pattern of protest moans from late August through November was associated with, but tended to lag behind, mating
behavior. The rate of protest moans given by females decreased with increasing size of males courting them. Male–male aggression
was significantly less during periods without protest moans than during periods in which protest moans occurred. These results
indicate that female moose gave protest moans to reduce harassment by smaller males, and assure a mating opportunity with
the most dominant male. Such a subtle mechanism of indirect mate choice by females may occur in other vertebrates in which
choice is limited by a mating system in which male–male combat and male dominance over females reduces opportunities for female
choice. The importance of female choice may be undervalued in studies of sexual selection in mammals. 相似文献
15.
In many species, females prefer large males as mating partners. Male size can easily be determined visually. We examined how such mate choice evolves when individuals are deprived of sensory information previously used to determine male quality. Using a cave-dwelling population of Atlantic mollies, Poecilia mexicana, as a model, we asked whether the female mating preference for large male body size still occurs in this cave fish, or whether it is lacking due to the absence of visual communication in the cave environment. In simultaneous choice tests we compared the time females spent with a large or a small male. In the river-dwelling and cave-dwelling fish, as well as the population originating from the cave entrance, we found a significant preference for large males in light. Hence, the ancestral mating preference of surface-dwelling mollies has been maintained during the evolution of the cave form. However, only the cave population exhibited a mating preference in darkness. Determination of male body size appears to have been taken over by a non-visual sensory system, probably the lateral line.Communicated by K. Lindström 相似文献
16.
James V. Briskie Robert Montgomerie Tarmo Põldmaa Peter T. Boag 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1998,43(3):181-190
In species where females copulate with more than one male during a single breeding attempt, males risk investing in offspring
that are not their own. In the polygynandrous Smith's longspur (Calcarius pictus), females copulate sequentially with one to three males for each clutch of eggs and most of these males later assist in feeding
the young. Using multilocus DNA profiling, we determined that there was mixed paternity in >75% of broods (n=31) but that few offspring (<1% of 114 nestlings) were sired by males outside the polygynandrous group. Male feeding rate
increased significantly with the number of young sired, with males siring four nestlings feeding the brood at double the frequency
of males siring only a single nestling. However, male Smith's longspurs appear to show a graded adjustment of paternal care
in response to paternity only when other males are available to compensate for reduced care: feeding rate did not vary in
relation to paternity when only one male provisioned young at the nest. There was no evidence that males could recognise their
own offspring within a brood and feed them preferentially. The number of offspring sired by each male was significantly correlated
with the number of days spent copulating with the attending female: on average, a male sired one offspring for every 2 days
of copulatory access. If males use their access to females to estimate paternity (and thereby decide on their subsequent level
of parental investment), a positive relationship is expected between the amount of female access and the subsequent feeding
rate to the nestlings. Nonetheless, male feeding effort was only weakly correlated with female access and more study is needed
to determine how males estimate their paternity in a brood.
Received: 1 June 1997 / Accepted after revision: 1 April 1998 相似文献
17.
Close association between an anoestrous female at the time of lactation and adult male(s) is relatively rare in mammals, but
common in baboons (Papio hamadryas subsp.). The functional significance of these “friendships” remains unclear, however. In chacma baboons (P. h. griseipes), friendships are a counter-strategy to infanticide by immigrant males. Experimental playback of female distress calls in
chacma baboons revealed that male friends are more motivated to protect females and infants than are control males. Olive
baboons (P. h. anubis) also exhibit friendships, but infanticide is rare, suggesting that friendships provide females with protection from non-lethal
aggression (anti-harassment hypothesis) or serve to promote male–infant bonds that later benefit the maturing juvenile (future
male caretaker hypothesis). We replicated these playback experiments on a group of olive baboons to test between these hypotheses
and to evaluate if the lower costs of non-lethal harassment lessens male protective responsiveness relative to protection
from (more costly) infanticide. Spatial data revealed that most lactating females had one to four friend males. Relative to
non-friends, friend dyads were characterized by higher rates of allogrooming and infant handling, but less agonism. Female
rank was correlated with the number of male friends. Just as in chacma baboons, playback of female screams elicited stronger
responses from male friends than control males in support the anti-harassment hypothesis. Compared to the chacma baboon, male
olive baboons appeared to exhibit similarly high levels of protective solicitude for female friends although they protect
against non-lethal harassment rather than infanticide. 相似文献
18.
The extent to which male birds in polygynous species with biparental care assist in nestling feeding often varies considerably
between nests of different mating status. Both how much polygynous males assist and how they divide their effort between nests
may have a profound effect on the evolution of mating systems. In this study we investigated how males in the facultatively
polygynous European starling Sturnus vulgaris invested in their different nests. The amount of male assistance affected the quality of the offspring. Polygynous males
invested as much as monogamous males, but divided their effort asymmetrically between nests, predominantly feeding nestlings
of first-mated (primary) females. Although females partly compensated for loss of male assistance, total feeding frequency
was lower at primary females’ nests than at monogamous females nests. Secondary females received even less assistance with
nestling rearing, and the extent to which males assisted decreased with the length of the interval between the hatching of
the primary and secondary clutches. These results are contrasted with those from a Belgian populations of starlings with a
much more protracted breeding season and thus greater opportunities for males to attract additional mates during the nestling
rearing period. The results show that both the “defence of male parental investment model” and the “asynchronous settlement
model” have explanatory power, but that their validity depends on the potential length of the breeding season.
Received: 21 July 1995/Accepted after revision: 13 July 1996 相似文献
19.
Reproductive trade-offs from mating with a successful male: the case of the tephritid fly Anastrepha obliqua 总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1
Diana Perez-Staples Martín Aluja Rogelio Macías-Ordóñez John Sivinski 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2008,62(8):1333-1340
In lekking species, females may become sperm-limited when mating with sexually successful males, and this may be exacerbated
by a poor male diet. Polygynous males may also be limited by the amount of accessory gland products (AGPs) they can transmit
to females, which in turn may influence the females’ refractory period and longevity. Here, we tested the effect of male mating
history, larval and adult diet on copula duration, mating intervals, female fecundity, fertilisation success, life span and
likelihood to remate using sexually successful males of the lekking tephritid fly Anastrepha obliqua. Flies originated from either a native or exotic host fruit and were protein-fed or deprived. Male diet and larval host influenced
copula duration, while the time elapsed between matings was affected by the interaction of mating order and male adult diet.
Female fecundity was not influenced by female position in mating order or protein inclusion into the male diet. However, mating
order and male larval diet influenced female fertilisation success. Importantly, as males mated successively they were less
able to induce a refractory period on females, as the last females to mate with a male were more likely to remate and had
slightly longer life spans than the first females to mate with males. These results might be attributed to a decrease in male
AGPs with increasing male mating frequency. We discuss the role of conditional expression of male mating frequency with respect
to A. obliqua’s life history, the trade-off that females face when mating with a successful male, the effect of larval diet on adult sexual
performance and the possibility for sexual conflict to occur due to high male mating rates and fitness costs to females. 相似文献
20.
Summary Behavioral observation and experimental manipulation of a marked population of brood parasitic brown-headed cowbirds (Molothrus ater) were conducted to determine whether or not females exhibit mate choice and to elucidate the ultimate basis for any such choice. Female choice was indicated by the fact that each female copulated with only one male, although most were courted by several. Patterns of female aggression towards males also revealed that females had the opportunity to display choice. Courtship by males was sometimes treated by females as harassment, but there was no conclusive evidence that a male provided his mate with protection from harassment by other males. Nor was there any indication of other proximate benefits or services males might have provided for females. Thus, there is no evidence that males provide females with anything other than their genes. An experimental removal of mated males and the pattern of subsequent remating of widowed females are consistent with female choice for male genetic quality.
Offprint requests to: D.A. Yokel at the present address 相似文献