Natural selection increases female fitness by reversing the exaggeration of a male sexually selected trait
Natural and sexual selection can be in opposition favouring different trait sizes, but disentangling these processes empirically is difficult. Here Okada et al. show that predation on males shifts the balance of selection in experimentally evolving beetle populations, disfavoring a sexually-selected...
Main Authors: | Kensuke Okada, Masako Katsuki, Manmohan D. Sharma, Katsuya Kiyose, Tomokazu Seko, Yasukazu Okada, Alastair J. Wilson, David J. Hosken |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Nature Publishing Group
2021-06-01
|
Series: | Nature Communications |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-23804-7 |
Similar Items
-
Male courtship behavior and weapon trait as indicators of indirect benefit in the bean bug, Riptortus pedestris.
by: Yû Suzaki, et al.
Published: (2013-01-01) -
A specific type of insulin-like peptide regulates the conditional growth of a beetle weapon.
by: Yasukazu Okada, et al.
Published: (2019-11-01) -
Revisiting Sexual Selection: An Exaggerated Signal of Fertility in the Amboseli Baboons
by: Fitzpatrick, Courtney
Published: (2012) -
Exaggerated Emphasis
by: Peter McCue
Published: (2014-05-01) -
Sexual selection in Drosophila simulans
by: Sharma, Manmohan Dev
Published: (2010)