Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.Evaluating the costs of a sexually selected weapon: big horns at a small price
Erin L. McCullough et al.
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR (2013)
Using Radio Telemetry to Assess Movement Patterns in a Giant Rhinoceros Beetle: Are There Differences Among Majors, Minors, and Females?
Erin L. McCullough
JOURNAL OF INSECT BEHAVIOR (2013)
Costs of elaborate weapons in a rhinoceros beetle: how difficult is it to fly with a big horn?
Erin L. McCullough et al.
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY (2012)
Insectivory by five sympatric carnivores in cool-temperate deciduous forests
Shinsuke Koike et al.
MAMMAL STUDY (2012)
A Mechanism of Extreme Growth and Reliable Signaling in Sexually Selected Ornaments and Weapons
Douglas J. Emlen et al.
SCIENCE (2012)
Does Sex-Selective Predation Stabilize or Destabilize Predator-Prey Dynamics?
David S. Boukal et al.
PLOS ONE (2008)
Evolution of male dimorphic allometry in a population of the Japanese horned beetle Trypoxylus dichotomus septentrionalis
Yoshihito Hongo
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY (2007)
Male-biased predation of western green lizards by Eurasian kestrels
David Costantini et al.
NATURWISSENSCHAFTEN (2007)
Silent night: adaptive disappearance of a sexual signal in a parasitized population of field crickets
Marlene Zuk et al.
BIOLOGY LETTERS (2006)
The predation cost of being a male: implications for sex-specific rates of ageing
P. Christe et al.
OIKOS (2006)
Horn length is the determining factor in the outcomes of escalated fights among male Japanese horned beetles, Allomyrina dichotoma L. (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae)
K Karino et al.
JOURNAL OF INSECT BEHAVIOR (2005)
Predator preference for brightly colored males in the guppy: a viability cost for a sexually selected trait
JGJ Godin et al.
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY (2003)