Background: While search costs have long been understood to affect the evolution of female preference, other costs associated with mating have been the focus of much less attention. Here I consider a novel mate choice cost: female-female intrasexual competition, that is, when females compete with each other for mates. This competition results in cost to female fecundity, such as a reduction in fertility due to decreased direct benefits, sperm limitation, or time and resources spent competing for a mate. I asked if female-female competition affects the evolution of preferences, and further, if the presence of multiple, different, preferences in a population can reduce competitive costs. Results: Using population genetic models of preference and trait evolution, I found that intrasexual competition leads to direct selection against female preferences, and restricts the parameter space under which preference may evolve. I also examined how multiple, different, preferences affected preference evolution with female intrasexual competition. Conclusions: Multiple preferences primarily serve to increase competitive costs and decrease the range of parameters under which preferences may evolve. © 2012 Frame; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Frame, A. M. (2012). The role of sexual preferences in intrasexual female competition. BMC Evolutionary Biology, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-12-218
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