1 results match your criteria: "University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CB 3280[Affiliation]"
Ecol Evol
July 2012
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CB 3280, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599.
Evidence suggests that female preferences may sometimes arise through sensory bias, and that males may subsequently evolve traits that increase their conspicuousness to females. Here, we ask whether indirect selection, arising through genetic associations (linkage disequilibrium) during the sexual selection that sensory bias imposes, can itself influence the evolution of preference strength. Specifically, we use population genetic models to consider whether or not modifiers of preference strength can spread under different ecological conditions when female mate choice is driven by sensory bias.
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