Genetic compatibility, mate choice and patterns of parentage: Invited Review
- T. Tregenza, N. Wedell
- BiologyMolecular Ecology
- 1 August 2000
There is growing interest in the possibility that genetic compatibility may drive mate choice, including gamete choice, particularly from the perspective of understanding why females frequently mate with more than one male, and whether there is any evidence for mate choice driven by these factors.
Sexual selection and speciation.
- T. M. Panhuis, R. Butlin, M. Zuk, T. Tregenza
- Psychology, BiologyTrends in Ecology & Evolution
- 1 July 2001
Genic capture and resolving the lek paradox.
- J. L. Tomkins, J. Radwan, J. Kotiaho, T. Tregenza
- BiologyTrends in Ecology & Evolution
- 1 June 2004
Sexual selection and animal personality
- W. Schuett, T. Tregenza, Sasha R. X. Dall
- PsychologyBiological Reviews of The Cambridge Philosophical…
- 1 May 2010
This work provides an overview of the available literature on the role of personality traits in intrasexual competition and mate choice in both human and non‐human animals and integrates this into a framework for considering how sexual selection can generate and maintain personality.
Double-blind review favours increased representation of female authors.
- A. Budden, T. Tregenza, L. Aarssen, J. Koricheva, R. Leimu, C. Lortie
- Psychology, MedicineTrends in Ecology & Evolution
- 2008
Polyandrous females avoid costs of inbreeding
- T. Tregenza, N. Wedell
- Biology, PsychologyNature
- 3 January 2002
It is shown that in crickets, the eggs of females that mate only with siblings have decreased hatching success, but if females mate with both a sibling and a non-sibling they avoid altogether the low egg viability associated with sibling matings.
BENEFITS OF MULTIPLE MATES IN THE CRICKET GRYLLUS BIMACULATUS
- T. Tregenza, N. Wedell
- BiologyEvolution; international journal of organic…
- 1 December 1998
The results support the hypothesis that certain males are genetically more compatible with certain females, and that this drives polyandry through differential fertilization success of sperm from more compatible males.
Sexual conflict and life histories
- N. Wedell, C. Kvarnemo, C. M. Lessells, T. Tregenza
- Psychology, BiologyAnimal Behaviour
- 1 May 2006
GENETIC ARCHITECTURE OF METABOLIC RATE: ENVIRONMENT SPECIFIC EPISTASIS BETWEEN MITOCHONDRIAL AND NUCLEAR GENES IN AN INSECT
- G. Arnqvist, D. Dowling, D. Hosken
- BiologyEvolution; international journal of organic…
- 1 December 2010
The genetic dissection of metabolic rate reveals a high level of complexity, encompassing genetic interactions over two genomes, and genotype × genotype → environment interactions, which suggests a mechanism that could contribute to the maintenance of nonneutral mtDNA polymorphism.
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