
- Heightened condition dependence is not a general feature of male eyespan in stalk-eyed flies (Diptera: Diopsidae)
- Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 47 (4), pp. 349361, 2001 A NEW GENUS AND THREE NEW SPECIES
- NEWS AND COMMENTARY Evolutionary genetics...............................................................
- Received 10 September 2003 Accepted 16 January 2004
- Comment: On the consequences of sexual selection for fisheries-induced evolution
- Accepted by D. Bickel: 8 Mar. 2006; published: 24 May 2006 1 ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition)
- Direct and correlated responses to artificial selection on male mating frequency in the stalk-eyed fly Cyrtodiopsis dalmanni
- BioMed Central Page 1 of 6
- Male eyespan and resource ownership affect contest outcome in the stalk-eyed fly, Teleopsis dalmanni
- ORIGINAL PAPER Eyespan reflects reproductive quality in wild stalk-eyed
- INTRODUCTION Pipunculidae are small (2-12 mm), inconspicuous
- Condition-dependent mutation rates and sexual selection Research Department of Genetics, Evolution & Environment, University College London, London, UK
- Revision of Fijian Tomosvaryella Aczl (Diptera: Pipunculidae) JEFFREY H. SKEVINGTON
- Current Biology Vol 15 No 9 Gilmour and colleagues [18], who
- Variation in preference for a male ornament is positively associated with female eyespan
- Contributed Paper Population Consequences of Environmental Sex
- insect body size. As the authors [6] state, ``Increased oxygen
- Accepted by D. Bickel: 8 Oct. 2007; published: 23 Oct. 2007 37 ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition)
- Journal of Theoretical Biology 249 (2007) 153161 Introduction of Trojan sex chromosomes to boost population growth
- Research Focus Control of introduced species using
- selection of rare beneficial mutations. Science 272, 18021804.
- Current Biology 16, R755R765, September 5, 2006 2006 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved DOI 10.1016/j.cub.2006.08.022 ReviewSexual Selection and
- BioMed Central Page 1 of 7
- BioMed Central Page 1 of 10
- 2004 The Society for the Study of Evolution. All rights reserved. Evolution, 58(5), 2004, pp. 10381046
- Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 52 (2), pp. 97269, 2006 DIPTERA OF THAILAND
- A fly that loves widely spaced eyes Are you a male Diasemopsis
- Male genes: X-pelled or X-cluded?