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Chapter 10 Opener: The female (left) and the male (right) of the gorgeous lizard.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 10 Opener: The female (left) and the male (right) of the gorgeous lizard."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 10 Opener: The female (left) and the male (right) of the gorgeous lizard

2 10.1 Bowerbird courtship revolves around the bower

3 10.2 Evolutionary relationships among 15 populations of bowerbirds

4 10.3 Different bowers in different populations of the same bowerbird species

5 10.4 Bower building may be an indicator of brain size

6 10.5(1) Variance in reproductive success is greater for males than females in the satin bowerbird

7 10.5(2) Variance in reproductive success is greater for males than females in the satin bowerbird

8 10.6 Male and female gametes differ greatly in size

9 10.7 Parental investment takes many forms

10 10.8 Sexual behavior differences between sexes may arise from differences in parental investment

11 10.9 Male sex drive is intense

12 10.10 A sex role reversal in which females, not males, advertise for mates

13 10.11(1) Phylogenetic relationship between complex parental care by males and sex role reversal

14 10.11(2) Phylogenetic relationship between complex parental care by males and sex role reversal

15 10.12 Mormon cricket males give their mates an edible nuptial gift

16 10.13 A katydid that shifts sex roles in relation to the availability of spermatophores

17 10.14 A developmental cost of a sexually selected trait

18 10.15 Sexually selected “ornaments” of males

19 10.16 Males of many species fight, using whatever weapons they have at their disposal

20 10.17 Dominance usually correlates strongly with reproductive success in savanna baboons

21 10.18 Dominant male baboons fail to control fertile females as completely as expected (Part 1)

22 10.18 Dominant male baboons fail to control fertile females as completely as expected (Part 2)

23 10.21 Satellite male mating tactics

24 10.22 A conditional strategy model in the horseshoe crab

25 10.24 Three different forms of the sponge isopod

26 10.25 Three different egg fertilization behaviors coexist in the bluegill sunfish

27 10.26 A male black-winged damselfly removes a rival’s sperm before transferring his own

28 10.27 Sperm competition has shaped the evolution of the black-winged damselfly’s penis

29 10.28 Sperm competition in the dunnock requires female cooperation

30 10.29 The reproductive anatomy of fertilization in birds

31 10.35 A potential nuptial gift

32 10.36 Sperm transfer and the size of nuptial gifts

33 10.37 Sexual suicide in the redback spider

34 10.40 A sexually selected ornament

35 10.41 Has cryptic female mate choice resulted in the evolution of stimulating male genitalia?

36 10.44 Do male ornaments signal good genes? (Part 1)

37 10.44 Do male ornaments signal good genes? (Part 2)

38 10.45 Chase-away selection theory

39 10.46 Sexual selection and the evolution of male traits harmful to females

40 10.47 Mating with large males reduces female fitness in fruit flies

41 10.50 A mutually cannibalistic species: the ultimate in sexual conflict

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