Princeton University Press
Female Control
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About this book
A growing body of evidence has begun to reveal flaws in the traditional assumption of female passivity and lack of discrimination after copulation has begun. William Eberhard has compiled an impressive array of research on the ability of females to shape the outcome of mating. He describes studies of many different cryptic mechanisms by which a female can accept a male for copulation but nevertheless reject him as a father. Evidence from various fields indicates that such selectivity by females may be the norm rather than the exception. Because most post-copulatory competition between males for paternity is played out within the bodies of females, female behavior, morphology, and physiology probably often influence male success in these contests. Eberhard draws examples from a diversity of organisms, ranging from ctenophores to scorpions, nematodes to frogs, and crickets to humans.
Cryptic female choice establishes a new bridge between sexual selection theory and reproductive physiology, in particular the physiological effects of male seminal products on female reproductive processes, such as sperm transport, oviposition, and remating. Eberhard interweaves his review of previous studies with speculation on the consequences of this theoretical development, and indicates promising new directions for future research.
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Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
vii -
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Preface and Acknowledgments
xiii - 1. What Is Cryptic Female Choice?
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1.1 Sexual Selection Results from Competition for Female Gametes, Not for Females
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1.2 How to Recognize Cryptic Female Choice
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1.3 Female "Rules of the Game"
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1.4 Taxonomic and Conceptual Biases of This Book
20 -
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1.5 Relationship with Genitalic Evolution
21 -
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1.6 Relationship with Male-Female Conflict
22 -
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1.7 Previous Biases: Male-Female Cooperation and "the Good of the Species"
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1.8 Previous Biases; Overly Strict Categorizations and "Fertilization Myopia"
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1.9 Previous Biases: Male Control and Female Passivity
34 -
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1.10 Summary
42 -
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Notes
43 - 2. Selection on Cryptic Female Choice
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2.1 Female Control Mechanisms and Natural Selection
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2.2 Categorical Descriptions and the Multiplicity of Female Sperm Storage Mechanisms
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2.3 Genetic Variance among Males
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2.4 Conditions Favoring the Evolution of Cryptic Female Choice
64 -
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2.5 A Test Case: Bedbugs
65 -
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2.6 Relationship between Cryptic Female Choice and "Sensory Traps "
67 -
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2.7 Do All Female-imposed "Rules of the Game" Result in Sexual Selection on Males?
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2.8 Good Genes, Runaway, or Endless Race?
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2.9 Summary
77 -
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Notes
78 - 3. Principal Mechanisms of Cryptic Female Choice
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3.1 Criteria
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3.2 Sometimes Discard Sperm of Current Male
81 -
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3.3 Sometimes Discard Sperm of Previous Males
88 -
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3.4 Sometimes Prevent Complete Intromission and Ejaculation
94 -
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3.5 Sometimes Fail to Transport Sperm to Storage Organs or Fertilization Sites
102 -
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3.6 Sometimes Remate with Another Male
111 -
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3.7 Sometimes Reduce Rate or Number of Offspring Produced
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3.8 Sometimes Forcefully Terminate Copulation before Sperm Are Transferred
125 -
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3.9 Sometimes Fail to Ovulate
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3.10 Sometimes Fail to Mature Eggs (Vitellogenesis)
139 -
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Notes
140 - 4. Other Mechanisms of Cryptic Female Choice
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4.1 Sometimes Fail to Prepare Uterus for Embryo Implantation
142 -
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4.2 Sometimes Impede Plugging of Reproductive Tract
146 -
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4.3 Sometimes Impede or Fail to Carry Out Plug Removal
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4.4 Sometimes Remove Spermatophore before Sperm Transfer Is Complete
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4.5 Sometimes Abort Zygotes (Bruce Effect
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4.6 Biased Use of Stored Sperm
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4.7 Sometimes Move Previous Male's Sperm to a Site Where the Current Male Can Manipulate Them
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4.8 Sometimes Make Subsequent Sperm Transfer More Difficult Morphologically
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4.9 Sometimes Resist Male Manipulations That Result in Discharge of His Spermatophore
182 -
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4.10 Sometimes Invest Less in Each Offspring
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4.11 Choose among Sperm That Have Reached the Egg
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4.12 Cryptic Male Choice
189 -
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4.13 Undetermined Mechanisms
190 -
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4.14 Discussion of Chapters 3 and 4
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4.15 Summary
202 -
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Notes
203 - 5. Evidence That Cryptic Female Choice Is Widespread, I: Copulatory Courtship and Related Phenomena
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5.1 Copulatory Courtship
204 -
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5.2 Genitalic Movements during Copulation as Courtship
219 -
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5.3 Other Evidence of Copulation as 239 Courtship
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5.4 Stimulation Necessary to Trigger Ejaculation
248 -
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5.5 Summary
254 -
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Notes
255 - 6. Evidence That Cryptic Female Choice Is Widespread, II: Effects of Male Sexual Products on Females
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6.1 Two Hypotheses
257 -
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6.2 Insects
258 -
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6.3 Ticks
291 -
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6.4 Mammals
298 -
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6.5 Other Animals
303 -
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6.6 A Third Hypothesis; Nutritional Effects on Females
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6.7 Taking Stock
315 -
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6.8 Summary
317 -
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Notes
318 - 7. Evidence That Cryptic Female Choice Is Widespread, III: Male and Female Morphology
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7.1 Female Reproductive Ducts: A Tortuous Route to the Egg
331 -
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7.2 Frequent Rapid, Divergent Evolution of Genitalia
349 -
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7.3 Summary
365 -
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Notes
366 - 8. Related Topics
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8.1 Significance of Variation in Volumes of Ejaculates and Sperm Storage Organs
367 -
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8.2 Intraspecific Variation in Cryptic Female Choice Criteria and Sexual Selection Theory
384 -
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8.3 Relative and Absolute Female Criteria in Cryptic Female Choice
386 -
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8.4 A Possible Relationship between Infertile Eggs and Overly Aggressive Sperm
389 -
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8.5 "Mistimed" Matings
394 -
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8.6 Summary
396 - 9. Evidence Ruling Out Cryptic Female Choice; Is It Common?
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9.1 Lack of Variation in Female Processes Determining Paternity
397 -
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9.2 Lack of Correlation between Paternity and Other Male Characters
406 -
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9.3 Lack of Intraspecific Genetic Differences
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9.4 Female Monandry
411 -
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9.5 Summary
414 -
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Notes
415 - 10. Summary and Conclusions
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10.1 Overview of the Arguments
417 -
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10.2 Consequences for Sexual Selection Theory
418 -
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References
423 -
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Subject Index
489 -
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Taxonomic Index
492