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      Socio-reproductive Conflicts and the Father's Curse Dilemma.

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          Abstract

          Evolutionary conflicts between males and females can manifest over sexually antagonistic interactions at loci or over sexually antagonistic interests within a locus. The latter form of conflict, intralocus sexual conflict, arises from sexually antagonistic selection and constrains the fitness of individuals through a phenotypic compromise. These conflicts, and socio-reproductive interactions in general, are commonly mediated by hormones, and thus predictive insights can be gained from studying their mediating effects. Here, we integrate several lines of evidence to describe a novel, hormonally mediated reproductive dilemma that we call the father's curse, which results from an intralocus conflict between mating and parental efforts. Essentially, a genetic locus exerts pleiotropic and antagonistic effects on the mating effort of one individual and the parental effort of a related individual who is the primary provider of parental care. We outline the criteria for operation of the father's curse dilemma, provide evidence of the phenomenon, and discuss the predictions and outcomes arising from its dynamics. By integrating the effects of hormones into socio-reproductive conflicts and socio-reproductive effort, clearer links between genotypes, phenotypes, and fitness can be established.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am Nat
          The American naturalist
          University of Chicago Press
          1537-5323
          0003-0147
          August 2018
          : 192
          : 2
          Article
          10.1086/698216
          30016171
          3307e4d1-bebb-4bcd-ad06-98d0bcfe7d4d
          History

          bank vole,genomic conflict,oxytocin,parent-offspring conflict,sexual conflict,testosterone

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