National Repository of Grey Literature 1 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Postcopulatory sexual selection
Kivader, Tomáš ; Reifová, Radka (advisor) ; Tomášek, Oldřich (referee)
Sexual selection is a key evolutionary process which affects transfer of gene's alleles to future generations. We distinguish precopulatory and postcopulatory sexual selection. Postcopulatory sexual selection is a type of sexual selection which takes place after copulation, more specifically after insemination. During precopulatory sexual selection same-sex individuals compete over the opportunity to reproduce. Simultaneously, males and females have different priorities. Males prefer quantity while females quality of offspring. So they compete in creating new strategies for increasing their own fitness. Consequently, sexual selection often leads to coevolution between males and females of the same species. Finally, this affects the segregation of individual populations and speciation. For establishing postcopulatory sexual selection it is important that multiple males are mating with the same female within the scope of one population. This is ensured by promiscuity or extra-pair copulations in various mating systems. There are two basic processes by which postcopulatory sexual selection is realized. Those are sperm competition and cryptic female choice. These mechanisms have not been explored in detail yet. Firstly, because monitoring postcopulatory processes in vivo is problematic, and secondly,...

Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.