ScienceOpen:
research and publishing network
For Publishers
Discovery
Metadata
Peer review
Hosting
Publishing
For Researchers
Join
Publish
Review
Collect
My ScienceOpen
Sign in
Register
Dashboard
Blog
About
Search
Advanced search
My ScienceOpen
Sign in
Register
Dashboard
Search
Search
Advanced search
For Publishers
Discovery
Metadata
Peer review
Hosting
Publishing
For Researchers
Join
Publish
Review
Collect
Blog
About
0
views
0
references
Top references
cited by
0
Cite as...
0 reviews
Review
0
comments
Comment
0
recommends
+1
Recommend
0
collections
Add to
0
shares
Share
Twitter
Sina Weibo
Facebook
Email
3,310
similar
All similar
Record
: found
Abstract
: not found
Book Chapter
: not found
Female Control: Sexual Selection by Cryptic Female Choice
8.3 Relative and Absolute Female Criteria in Cryptic Female Choice
monograph
Publication date:
December 31 1996
Publisher:
Princeton University Press
Read this book at
Publisher
Buy book
Review
Review book
Invite someone to review
Bookmark
Cite as...
There is no author summary for this book yet. Authors can add summaries to their books on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Related collections
The Behavioral Economics of Music: A Framework for the Study of Music Listening, Evaluation, and Choice Behavior
Author and book information
Book Chapter
Publication date:
December 31 1996
Pages
: 386-389
DOI:
10.1515/9780691207209-071
SO-VID:
88f8dabe-2884-435a-af4d-077175fe2e45
History
Data availability:
Comments
Comment on this book
Sign in to comment
Book chapters
pp. i
Front Matter
pp. i
Frontmatter
pp. vii
Table of Contents
pp. vii
Contents
pp. xiii
Preface and Acknowledgments
pp. xiii
Preface and Acknowledgments
pp. 1
1.1 Sexual Selection Results from Competition for Female Gametes, Not for Females
pp. 3
What Is Cryptic Female Choice?
pp. 7
1.2 How to Recognize Cryptic Female Choice
pp. 10
1.3 Female "Rules of the Game"
pp. 20
1.4 Taxonomic and Conceptual Biases of This Book
pp. 21
1.5 Relationship with Genitalic Evolution
pp. 22
1.6 Relationship with Male-Female Conflict
pp. 27
1.7 Previous Biases: Male-Female Cooperation and "the Good of the Species"
pp. 28
1.8 Previous Biases; Overly Strict Categorizations and "Fertilization Myopia"
pp. 34
1.9 Previous Biases: Male Control and Female Passivity
pp. 42
1.10 Summary
pp. 43
Notes
pp. 44
Selection on Cryptic Female Choice
pp. 45
2.1 Female Control Mechanisms and Natural Selection
pp. 50
2.2 Categorical Descriptions and the Multiplicity of Female Sperm Storage Mechanisms
pp. 61
2.3 Genetic Variance among Males
pp. 64
2.4 Conditions Favoring the Evolution of Cryptic Female Choice
pp. 65
2.5 A Test Case: Bedbugs
pp. 67
2.6 Relationship between Cryptic Female Choice and "Sensory Traps "
pp. 70
2.7 Do All Female-imposed "Rules of the Game" Result in Sexual Selection on Males?
pp. 73
2.8 Good Genes, Runaway, or Endless Race?
pp. 77
2.9 Summary
pp. 78
Notes
pp. 80
Principal Mechanisms of Cryptic Female Choice
pp. 80
3.1 Criteria
pp. 81
3.2 Sometimes Discard Sperm of Current Male
pp. 88
3.3 Sometimes Discard Sperm of Previous Males
pp. 94
3.4 Sometimes Prevent Complete Intromission and Ejaculation
pp. 102
3.5 Sometimes Fail to Transport Sperm to Storage Organs or Fertilization Sites
pp. 111
3.6 Sometimes Remate with Another Male
pp. 119
3.7 Sometimes Reduce Rate or Number of Offspring Produced
pp. 125
3.8 Sometimes Forcefully Terminate Copulation before Sperm Are Transferred
pp. 133
3.9 Sometimes Fail to Ovulate
pp. 139
3.10 Sometimes Fail to Mature Eggs (Vitellogenesis)
pp. 140
Notes
pp. 142
4.1 Sometimes Fail to Prepare Uterus for Embryo Implantation
pp. 142
Other Mechanisms of Cryptic Female Choice
pp. 146
4.2 Sometimes Impede Plugging of Reproductive Tract
pp. 153
4.3 Sometimes Impede or Fail to Carry Out Plug Removal
pp. 155
4.4 Sometimes Remove Spermatophore before Sperm Transfer Is Complete
pp. 162
4.5 Sometimes Abort Zygotes (Bruce Effect
pp. 167
4.6 Biased Use of Stored Sperm
pp. 174
4.7 Sometimes Move Previous Male's Sperm to a Site Where the Current Male Can Manipulate Them
pp. 179
4.8 Sometimes Make Subsequent Sperm Transfer More Difficult Morphologically
pp. 182
4.9 Sometimes Resist Male Manipulations That Result in Discharge of His Spermatophore
pp. 184
4.10 Sometimes Invest Less in Each Offspring
pp. 187
4.11 Choose among Sperm That Have Reached the Egg
pp. 189
4.12 Cryptic Male Choice
pp. 190
4.13 Undetermined Mechanisms
pp. 197
4.14 Discussion of Chapters 3 and 4
pp. 202
4.15 Summary
pp. 203
Notes
pp. 204
Evidence That Cryptic Female Choice Is Widespread, I:
pp. 204
5.1 Copulatory Courtship
pp. 219
5.2 Genitalic Movements during Copulation as Courtship
pp. 239
5.3 Other Evidence of Copulation as 239 Courtship
pp. 248
5.4 Stimulation Necessary to Trigger Ejaculation
pp. 254
5.5 Summary
pp. 255
Notes
pp. 256
Evidence That Cryptic Female Choice Is Widespread, II:
pp. 257
6.1 Two Hypotheses
pp. 258
6.2 Insects
pp. 291
6.3 Ticks
pp. 298
6.4 Mammals
pp. 303
6.5 Other Animals
pp. 304
6.6 A Third Hypothesis; Nutritional Effects on Females
pp. 315
6.7 Taking Stock
pp. 317
6.8 Summary
pp. 318
Notes
pp. 331
Evidence That Cryptic Female Choice Is Widespread, III:
pp. 331
7.1 Female Reproductive Ducts: A Tortuous Route to the Egg
pp. 349
7.2 Frequent Rapid, Divergent Evolution of Genitalia
pp. 365
7.3 Summary
pp. 366
Notes
pp. 367
Related Topics
pp. 367
8.1 Significance of Variation in Volumes of Ejaculates and Sperm Storage Organs
pp. 384
8.2 Intraspecific Variation in Cryptic Female Choice Criteria and Sexual Selection Theory
pp. 386
8.3 Relative and Absolute Female Criteria in Cryptic Female Choice
pp. 389
8.4 A Possible Relationship between Infertile Eggs and Overly Aggressive Sperm
pp. 394
8.5 "Mistimed" Matings
pp. 396
8.6 Summary
pp. 397
Evidence Ruling Out Cryptic Female Choice:
pp. 397
9.1 Lack of Variation in Female Processes Determining Paternity
pp. 406
9.2 Lack of Correlation between Paternity and Other Male Characters
pp. 407
9.3 Lack of Intraspecific Genetic Differences
pp. 411
9.4 Female Monandry
pp. 414
9.5 Summary
pp. 415
Notes
pp. 416
Summary and Conclusions
pp. 417
10.1 Overview of the Arguments
pp. 418
10.2 Consequences for Sexual Selection Theory
pp. 423
References
pp. 423
References
pp. 489
Subject Index
pp. 489
Subject Index
pp. 492
Taxonomic Index
pp. 492
Taxonomic Index
pp. 502
Back Matter
Similar content
3,310
8.3 Carbamates (I)
Authors:
Philip Kocieński
8.3:Distinguished Paper: Next-Generation Display Technology: Quantum-Dot LEDs
Authors:
Jesse R. Manders
,
Lei Qian
,
Alexandre Titov
…
Fiber Wireless Transmission of 8.3-Gb/s/ch QPSK-OFDM Signals in 75–110-GHz Band
Authors:
Ying Zhao
,
Anton Dogadaev
,
Xianbin Yu
…
See all similar