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2014
DOI: 10.1093/jhered/esu037
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The Role of Ecology in Speciation by Sexual Selection: A Systematic Empirical Review

Abstract:Theoretical and empirical research indicates that sexual selection interacts with the ecological context in which mate choice occurs, suggesting that sexual and natural selection act together during the evolution of premating reproductive isolation. However, the relative importance of natural and sexual selection to speciation remains poorly understood. Here, we applied a recent conceptual framework for examining interactions between mate choice divergence and ecological context to a review of the empirical li… Show more

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Cited by 63 publications
(60 citation statements)
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“…Although there might be a bias in these numbers (for example that sexual selection studies have been made on species having some feature that indicates a high potential for sexual selection) these results imply that sexual selection might have a vast evolutionary effect. In many cases, natural and sexual selection interact;Scordato et al (2014) found, for example, that it was most often a combination of natural and sexual selection involved in speciation. Similarly, ecology and sexual selection can jointly influence the evolutionary response (e.g.…”
Section: Incorporation Of Sexual Selection and Sexual Conflict In Plamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although there might be a bias in these numbers (for example that sexual selection studies have been made on species having some feature that indicates a high potential for sexual selection) these results imply that sexual selection might have a vast evolutionary effect. In many cases, natural and sexual selection interact;Scordato et al (2014) found, for example, that it was most often a combination of natural and sexual selection involved in speciation. Similarly, ecology and sexual selection can jointly influence the evolutionary response (e.g.…”
Section: Incorporation Of Sexual Selection and Sexual Conflict In Plamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the center of this discussion is whether sexual selection alone can drive speciation, or whether ecological divergence is a prerequisite for the completion of reproductive isolation (Panhuis et al 2001;Bussière et al 2007;Safran et al 2013). Although there are some cases in which sexual or natural selection is the dominant process driving divergence (reviewed in(Kraaijeveld et al 2011)), the most common scenario is that sexual and natural selection act together to drive variation in the traits used in reproductive isolationScordato et al 2014). The pertinent question then becomes not which process is most important in causing speciation, but how the two processes interact, how the phenotypic traits used in mate selection and reproductive isolation are shaped by this interaction, and if interactions are consistent or predictable across systems(Arnegard et al 2010;Wagner et al 2012;Safran et al 2013).…”
Section: From Geographic Variation In Sexual Selection To Speciationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, sexual selection has been shown to interact with ecological context in the early stages of population divergence and the formation of premating barriers to reproduction (Scordato et al .), yet we know very little about the relative importance of each selective process in the accumulation of biologically relevant genomic differences among populations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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