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Sexual selection in the Cuatro Cienegas pupfish : mate choice and hybridization between Cyprinodon atrorus and Cyprinodon bifasciatus /Ludlow, Anna Melina, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Lehigh University, 1999. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 110-117).
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Tracing sperm in multiply-mated female Anastrepha suspensa, (Diptera:Tephridae) /Dhakal, Preeti, January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--Eastern Illinois University, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 94-104).
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Hormonal mechanisms for variation in female mate choiceLynch, Kathleen Sheila, Wilczyński, W., January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2005. / Supervisor: Walt Wilczynski. Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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ECOLOGICAL FACTORS, PLEIOTROPY, AND THE EVOLUTION OF SEXUAL DIMORPHISM IN CHERNETID PSEUDOSCORPIONS (PHORESY, QUANTITATIVE GENETICS, SEXUAL SELECTION).ZEH, DAVID WAYNE. January 1986 (has links)
The determinants of sexual dimorphism in a family of false scorpions (Pseudoscorpionida, Chernetidae) were investigated experimentally and with a literature analysis of comparative morphometric and habitat data. Species vary in the extent to which males and females differ in size of the conspicuous, prehensile pedipalps. Patterns within the Chernetidae suggest that dimorphism is a highly variable condition, relatively unconstrained by phylogenetic influences. The evolution of species with enlarged male pedipalps appears to be associated with a change from nonpairing to pairing sperm transfer behavior, and aggressive mate acquisition by males. Experiments with Dinocheirus arizonensis demonstrate a high correlation between male combat ability and chela size. Comparison of male and female life histories show prolonged development in males, and morphological comparisons implicate pedipalp dimorphism as a causative factor in this developmental rate difference. Prolonged development may be particularly costly to males, given the pattern of female sexual receptivity in this species. Females were found to become unreceptive soon after mating and remain so throughout a protected period of brood development. Experimental manipulations suggest that the male developmental rate cost is only outweighed under high density conditions when superior combat ability results in increased mating success. Repeated measures experiments failed to show any correlation between male pedipalp size and number of spermatophores accepted by a female. Parent-offspring regressions suggest the existence of additive genetic variance for male chela size and indicate a strong genetic correlation between this trait and cephalothorax length. Full-sib phenotypic correlations suggest that in D. arizonensis sexual divergence through sexual selection may be constrained by a high genetic correlation between males and females. Finally, the role of phoresy in the colonization of ephemeral, patchy habitats is investigated. Results support the hypothesis that attachment of pseudoscorpions to larger, more mobile arthropods represents a behavior functioning specifically for dispersal.
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Evolutionary consequences of the costs of mate choiceHead, Megan, School of Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences, UNSW January 2005 (has links)
While the existence of costs of mate choice is well accepted, the effects that these costs have on mating systems and the evolution of mate choice are controversial. The aim of this thesis is to explore a range of different types of costs, including costs of being choosy (using guppies, Poecilia reticulata) and costs of mating with attractive males (using house crickets, Acheta domesticus), and investigate how these costs influence female mating behaviour, sexual selection on males and the evolution of mate choice. I use a range of experimental techniques to investigate these questions including: comparisons of feral populations of guppies (Chapter Two), laboratory experiments that manipulate the social (sex ratio, density; Chapters Three and Four) and physical (water current; Chapter Five) environment in which guppies live, genetic paternity analysis and multivariate selection analysis (Chapter Four). I also conduct longitudinal studies of house crickets that estimate the net fitness consequences (Chapter Six) and indirect effects (Chapter Six and Seven) of mating with attractive males. My results demonstrate that the physical and social environment of individuals are important in determining the costliness of both sexual display and mate choice, and thus influence the mating behaviour of males and females. These differences in mating behaviour are often thought to lead to differences in sexual selection on males. My study of the effects of operational sex ratio and density on multivariate sexual selection, however, indicates that differences in behaviour may not necessarily translate into differences in selection. In contrast to predictions of recent theory, my results also indicate that although there are many costs to being choosy and to mating with attractive males, these may be outweighed by indirect benefits. Hence, despite direct costs of choice, mate choice may evolve via indirect benefits to females. Indirect benefits that are often neglected in sexual selection studies, that I show to be important in determining the net fitness of mating with attractive males, include the attractiveness of sons and the mate choice decisions of daughters. These results highlight the importance of examining the consequences of mate choice over multiple generations.
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Examining the relative lifetime fitnesses for alternative mating phenotypes in Xiphophorus multilineatusBono, Lisa M. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Ohio University, November, 2009. / Release of full electronic text on OhioLINK has been delayed until September 1, 2010. Title from PDF t.p. Includes bibliographical references.
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Reproductive traits and sexual selection in the mangrove littorinid snails, Littoraria ardouiniana and L. melanostomaNg, Pun-tung., 吳潘東. January 2013 (has links)
According to Darwin, any inheritable traits that enhance fitness (i.e. survival and reproductive success) would be adaptive in a given environment, and therefore subject to natural selection. Some traits that enhance reproductive success but not necessarily survival may, however, evolve through the process of sexual selection. The importance of sexual selection has been intensively studied in “higher animals” birds, mammals and insects but has largely been neglected in “lower animals” such as gastropods. Using two mangrove snails, Littoraria ardouiniana HEUDE 1885 and L. melanostoma GRAY 1839 (Littorinidae) as model species, this thesis documents their various reproductive traits and the occurrence of sexual selection, in an attempt to understand how these animals optimize their fitness.
Being one of a few gastropod families that live closely associated with mangrove habitats, various adaptive reproductive traits are likely to have evolved in the genus Littoraria. The two Littoraria species exhibited several, contrasting, reproductive traits (e.g. reproductive mode; length of reproductive season; seasonal fecundity and egg- or larvae-releasing rate), which may represent species-specific strategies to optimize reproductive success. Both species adopted mucus trail following as a mate-searching strategy; with males being able to discriminate the trails laid by conspecific females and trail orientation during the mating season. Since these two snails mate in the complex habitat of mangrove tree canopies, incorporating some cue into mucus trails to aid mate recognition would increase potential encounter rates and hence reproductive success. 1D proteomic techniques identified two potential pheromones in the trail mucus of female L. ardouiniana, but further investigations are needed to confirm their possible role as sex pheromones.
Evidence for sexual selection was found in L. ardouiniana through male mate choice and male-male competition. Large male L. ardouiniana showed a preference for mucus trails laid by large (= more fecund) females, but this preference was not seen in small males, suggesting a size-based male mate preference. Males of this species also mated with larger females for a longer duration and they showed physical aggression (i.e. they pushed each other) when they encountered a female. These sexual selection mechanisms may drive size-assortative mating patterns in littorinid species and in other animals.
Conversely, L. melanostoma exhibited no obvious male mate preference or male aggression. Such differences in sexual selection patterns from L. ardouiniana were proposed to be a result of differences in operational sex ratio and variation in female quality. As many gastropods show similar mating behaviour to littorinids (i.e. trail following, shell mounting and copulation), sexual selection may operate in a comparable manner in other gastropods. By revealing the complexity of sex roles of males and females (e.g. the mutual occurrence of male mate choice and male-male competition) and condition-dependent male mate preference in these mangrove snails, this thesis has contributed to a missing link between sexual selection and the “lower animals” and provides new insights into the operation of sexual selection in animals. / HKU 3 Minute Thesis Award, Champion (2012) / published_or_final_version / Biological Sciences / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Reproductive success and male traits in the spotless starling, Sturnus unicolor /Celis, Patricia. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of St Andrews, April 2009.
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The role of sexual selection in determining overall mating patterns and mate choice in chum salmon /Schroder, Steven L. January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1981. / Vita. Bibliography: leaves [246]-271.
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Sexual selection in Fowler's toad, Bufo woodhousei fowleri /Thornhill, Gary Marshal January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
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