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1 ucrose (HF/HS) diet for 4-10 weeks, and then mated.
2 in fecundity or competition for high-quality mates.
3 frequency, indicating acceptance of multiple mates.
4 HF7), on fecundity and population growth via mating.
5 ism and mitochondria-related functions) upon mating.
6 stigated mostly in relation to sexuality and mating.
7 ation of Cdc42 activity through a GAP during mating.
8 cesses that are enhanced and suppressed upon mating.
9 ulation did not show evidence of assortative mating.
10 creases the strength of positive assortative mating.
11 received ovalbumin (OVA) intranasally before mating.
12 erations through strong ancestry-assortative mating.
13 nd increase the probability of occurrence of mating.
14 fied the genetic consequences of assortative mating.
15 luence over eukaryotic physiology to include mating.
16 biosynthesis in female D. melanogaster after mating [14].
17 pti females by causing them to reject future mates [9].
18 s at the mating locus, had defects in sexual mating ability but appeared to be more virulent than the
19 ing ability in the light and for the loss of mating ability in the dark.
20 as a negative regulator for the induction of mating ability in the light and for the loss of mating a
21 b (AOB) using targeted ex vivo recordings of mating-activated neurons tagged with a fluorescent repor
22                                          The mating advantage of these behavioural traits depended on
23 es aegypti forms aerial swarms that serve as mating aggregations [1].
24 ages are prepared (chimarrao, terere and tea mate), all of them rich in bioactive substances.
25                                      We thus mated an LED light source, a dark-field condenser and a
26 birth (NL), and 3) rats that were allowed to mate and become pregnant and suckled their pups for 21 d
27 reproduce (NR), 2) rats that were allowed to mate and become pregnant but did not suckle their pups a
28 ilitate reproduction by attracting potential mates and altering their behavior and physiology.
29 numerous sex faces increased competition for mates and is more likely to yield to the sociosexual pre
30 ese tactics can be disadvantageous for their mates and other males.
31 opportunities and threats posed by potential mates and rivals.
32 e controlled signalling pathways involved in mating and filamentous growth.
33 s as attractants is limited by male multiple mating and immigration of mated females into treated are
34 cestry due to spatial locality in historical mating and migration patterns.
35 adaptive for young people (e.g., in terms of mating and reproduction) but costly for older people in
36  human or animal blood sources for survival, mating and reproduction.
37   In the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, mating and the receipt of male seminal fluid proteins re
38 bination between loci underlying assortative mating and those under divergent ecological selection.
39      Moreover, pups are born through natural mating and thrive through maternal lactation.
40                   As Drosophila adults feed, mate, and oviposit on food, they perceive the pheromone
41 e addiction of Rm to endobacteria extends to mating, and is mediated by the symbiont gaining transcri
42 uctus ejaculatorius simplex before and after mating, and these differences could be used to increase
43      Increased difficulty of females finding mates as male density declines is the most frequently re
44  analyzed in four commercial brands of yerba mate, as well as the antioxidant capacity of the beverag
45 hen use simulations to show how variation in mating assortment interacts with population-level polyan
46                                              Mating assortment therefore represents a key-albeit over
47  sexual selection indirectly by constraining mating assortment through the saturation of the mating n
48 first review empirical studies, showing that mating assortment varies considerably in nature, due lar
49               Here, we quantify what we call mating assortment with network analysis to specify expli
50  Controlling for average polyandry, positive mating assortment, arising when more polygynous males te
51 cterial chondroitin lyases induce S. rosetta mating at environmentally relevant concentrations, sugge
52 e used to increase the effective loudness of mate-attraction calls.
53 detection of salient events, such as food or mate availability.
54 or affordances should be integrated into the mating-based evolutionary account of Maestripieri et al.
55 ating season in wild Arctic foxes may affect mating behavior and reproductive success.
56 FRP-3 suppresses gonadal steroidogenesis and mating behavior in NMRs given the opportunity to undergo
57 ression in female presence is attenuated and mating behavior is impaired.
58 luence the effects of JH on egg development, mating behavior, feeding, or other processes.
59 ine Y had previously been implicated in male mating behavior, recent data from the Anopheles gambiae
60                                 Sex-specific mating behaviors occur in a variety of mammals, with the
61 s with two sexes that links individual-level mating behaviour (in an individual-based model) to popul
62         We show that details of individuals' mating behaviour can impact the rate of population sprea
63 a female provides the aggressor with delayed mating benefits [6].
64 ecrease in the phytochemicals content, yerba mate beverages maintain their functional properties such
65 bial and antitumoral activities of the yerba mate beverages.
66 ing this circuit in a social context without mating biases later preference towards a partner, indica
67 tudying parasitism, parasitoid genomics, and mating biology.
68 hybrid viability and/or positive assortative mating but are then replenished by dispersal from south
69 elect among individual males advertising for mates by taking advantage of small, periodic decreases i
70 and evolved significant positive assortative mating by diet.
71 To define the contribution of each factor to mating, C. albicans white cells were reverse-engineered
72 vocal fish that relies upon the detection of mate calls for reproductive success.
73 esults extend the general finding that plant mating can be impacted by human-mediated agents of selec
74 time during which individuals can search for mates causes a demographic Allee effect which can slow,
75 found to abrogate membrane pore formation in mating cells.
76 versity and serves as an important signal in mate choice and aggressive interactions.
77 lications for understanding the evolution of mate choice and sexual conflict in mammals, as well as t
78  by mapping both divergent traits and female mate choice in a classic model of ecological speciation:
79                                 By measuring mate choice in F2 hybrid females, we allowed for recombi
80 date to examine the fitness benefits of free mate choice in humans.
81                     Here we demonstrate that mate choice in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster res
82 tion occurs inside or close to an adult, (2) mate choice involves long-distance signals, (3) adults o
83 n mate detection and assessment, as rational mate choice largely persists when visual or chemical sen
84 ans and other species that benefit from free mate choice led us to hypothesize that it also confers r
85                           The effect of free mate choice on the relative magnitude of fitness benefit
86 ive trait loci (QTLs) associated with female mate choice that also predicted female morphology along
87 uably the most important sense, underpinning mate choice, parental care, territoriality and even dise
88 ral compatibility between partners with free mate choice.
89  feeding niches [5] also predicted F2 female mate choice.
90                            However, by using mate-choice experiments, we reveal disassortative mate p
91 (EC)) and the other forcing it (circular sib mating (CM)).
92 ombination extending beyond loci determining mating compatibility despite lack of male/female roles a
93                                        Using mating-competent C. albicans haploids, each carrying a d
94                          We posit that local mate competition combined with parental control over mar
95 s male lifespan under solitary, grouped, and mated conditions.
96                              In female mice, mating creates a long-lasting sensory memory for the phe
97 elicited in the absence of aversive chemical mating cues also is dependent on ETH-JH signaling.
98                       Males catered to their mates' desire when female behaviour was the only cue ava
99 troica longipes) respond to changes in their mates' desires and nutritional need when sharing food.
100 emale behaviours and cues act redundantly in mate detection and assessment, as rational mate choice l
101 fic inhibitor could effectively redirect the mating differentiation, confirming the causative role of
102 t rewiring of gene regulatory network during mating differentiation.
103         Mouse urine odours allow subspecific mate discrimination, with assortative preferences eviden
104 residue fruit have increased the adoption of mating disruption and use of biological insecticides.
105 methods that combine Wolbachia invasion with mating disruption tactics to enhance the pre-existing Al
106 provide vital nutritional resources to their mates during reproduction.
107 lso indicate that living with stressed brood mates early in life entails some long-term costs.
108 ions shows a log-linear relationship between mating efficiency and protein binding strength for inter
109 programmed to link interaction strength with mating efficiency using synthetic agglutination (SynAg).
110 l connectivity, particularly after the first mating encounter, predicts how quickly animals begin aff
111                                  This single mating event provisions the female with sufficient sperm
112 ntally identify the molecular signature of a mating event within the sexual population that combines
113 er, these data show that concurrent Meth and mating experience causes maladapative sexual behavior th
114 CatSperz-null sperm cells retrieved from the mated female uterus partially rescue in vitro fertilizat
115 nsfer of SP activates synthesis of JH in the mated female, which in turn suppresses resistance to inf
116                                 We find that mated females are more likely to die from infection, suf
117 d by male multiple mating and immigration of mated females into treated areas.
118  MAP kinase-controlled processes involved in mating, filamentous growth and biofilm formation, and al
119 sults, we propose a stricter definition of a mate-finding Allee effect, which is not met by the commo
120 r expression of two previously characterized MATE flavonoid transporters MtMATE1 and MtMATE2 also dep
121                       We then quantified the mating function for the inland silverside (Menidia beryl
122  component in any sex-specific model is the "mating function" (the relationship between sex ratio and
123    However, for species with a nearly linear mating function, such as Menidia, feminization and mascu
124 ations strongly depend upon the shape of the mating function.
125 males, silversides exhibited a nearly linear mating function.
126 hich is not met by the commonly used minimum mating function.
127 ission process occurring through assortative mating, genetic inheritance, and the inheritance of phys
128                        Passive mechanisms of mate guarding are used by males to promote sperm precede
129 eptum to modulate aggression associated with mate guarding.
130 ndergoes polarized growth during budding and mating, has been a useful model system to study cell pol
131 owed significant impairment of inhibition of mating, higher pERK expression under baseline conditions
132  ischemic stroke during ongoing LLH on Heart Mate II support.
133                                        Yerba mate (Ilex paraguariensis) is a plant that grows natural
134                                  Ae. aegypti mate in flight near human hosts [6], and females become
135 ll cytoplasm, to animals looking for food or mates in natural landscapes, to rescuers during search a
136 s and in selecting the calls of high-quality mates in the presence of simulated chorus noise that was
137 5), demonstrating height-related assortative mating in both populations.
138  factors underlies the epigenetic control of mating in C. albicans We also discuss how fitness advant
139 ess the degree of height-related assortative mating in European-American and African-American populat
140                 Prior studies of assortative mating in humans focused on trait similarity among spous
141 at bacteria likely regulate choanoflagellate mating in nature.
142 ons and reproductive modes, from near-random mating in protandry, to aggregate- and harem-spawning in
143 pulation often depends critically on finding mates, individuals capable of uniparental reproduction m
144                                 By contrast, mating-induced death, which is characterized by germline
145 urin regulates Dig2 and Rod1/Art4 to inhibit mating-induced gene expression and activate receptor int
146                                   Successful mating induces lifetime refractoriness to subsequent ins
147                                        Yerba mate is a beverage rich in bioactive compounds popular i
148 utant strain, with multiple mutations at the mating locus, had defects in sexual mating ability but a
149 on and traits that contribute to assortative mating maintained?
150 -wide gene expression in virgin and recently mated males revealed coherent responses, with biological
151 cific biological processes, such as budding, mating, mating type switch, consumption of nutrients, an
152  Thus, our findings suggest that assortative mating may constitute an intermittent and unpredictable
153 lter mating systems, breeding synchrony, and mate monopolization rates.
154                                              Mating motivation likely plays a role in bias to attract
155                                              Mating motivations can explain attractiveness benefits,
156 to account the chances of success, strategic mating motivations do imply a bias not toward the most a
157 ccount of the "beauty premium" based only on mating motivations overlooks adaptationist models of soc
158 provide more compelling evidence in favor of mating motives and suggest the direction of future resea
159 and evolutionary psychology is laudable, but mating motives do not explain the beauty premium.
160                                              Mating motives lead decision makers to favor attractive
161 ore, multiple lines of evidence suggest that mating motives play a more important role in driving fin
162 ys that are hard to explain via evolutionary mating motives.
163 ing assortment through the saturation of the mating network.
164 note that attractiveness is correlated among mated nodes.
165 ned by genes at the MAT (mating-type) locus; mating occurs between MATa and MATalpha cells.
166 e of life-history differences and asymmetric mating on competitive outcomes.
167            Furthermore, female propensity to mate only once in nature in male swarms likely diminishe
168  Delayed self-righting can result in loss of mating opportunities or death.
169 s [2], males compete less intensely for each mating opportunity.
170 .25), suggesting either positive assortative mating or a shared environmental contribution to EoE.
171 females can signal specific desires to their mates, or if males can cater to female desire in the wil
172 ity is unique to specific behaviors, such as mating, or whether it is a more general feature of the A
173                                              Mating outside this population is prevented by several 1
174                         Through whole-genome mate pair sequencing, we mapped and classified rearrange
175 iguity to discover interchromosomal SVs from mate-pair and pair-end sequencing data.
176 lity of contigs and scaffolds using Illumina mate-pair libraries and genetic map information.
177 ssemblies from high-coverage sequencing with mate-pair libraries extending up to 20 kilobases.
178 les the high numbers of artifacts present in mate-pair sequencing and reduces the false positive rate
179  offspring distribution of highly attractive mated pairs.
180                         Using an established mating paradigm, fetal microchimeric cells present in ma
181 in which individuals can reproduce without a mate, particularly in isolated locales such as oceanic i
182  of males to gain increased access to female mating partners.
183 mpacts of climate change on the evolution of mating patterns.
184  (chamomile, elderberries, fennel, hibiscus, mate, peppermint, rooibos and rose hip) cover the most i
185                     Bioavailability of yerba mate phenolic compounds was assessed in healthy humans.
186 st Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the exposure to mating pheromone activates a prototypic mitogen-activate
187 sponse; however, they were less sensitive to mating pheromone than were young cells because of age-de
188               When exposed to a high dose of mating pheromone, the yeast cell undergoes growth arrest
189 ptors for the perception of trisporic acids, mating pheromones unique to Mucoromycotina.
190                         In conclusion, yerba mate polyphenols are partially bioavailable and extensiv
191                    These changes result in a mating preference of genetically modified males for wild
192 3) the importance accorded attractiveness in mate preferences is culturally shaped and likely evoluti
193 choice experiments, we reveal disassortative mate preferences of the different wing-pattern morphs.
194  may evolve strategies (for example, special mating preferences) to mitigate the effects of small pop
195 lic acid-supplemented diet (FASD) throughout mating, pregnancy and lactation.
196 tiated by an aged haploid cell show declined mating probability at an early stage and recover as the
197 ates that the axial budding pattern enhances mating probability at an early stage and the bipolar bud
198 ssentially sterile, whereas opaque cells are mating-proficient.
199  a function of the potentially heterogeneous mating prospects in the population.
200 was also impeded resulting in a reduction of mating rates by up to 80%.
201 r evolution of traits that allow assortative mating (reinforcement).
202       While our studies are motivated by the mating response of yeast, we believe our results and sim
203 erlie a cell differentiation switch in yeast mating response.
204                   Old cells could initiate a mating response; however, they were less sensitive to ma
205 for IYO interactors, we identified RPAP2 IYO Mate (RIMA), a homolog of yeast and human proteins linke
206 served song reinforcement exclusively to the mate's song, although their striatal dopamine neurotrans
207                      Evolving more effective mate search may alleviate Allee effects, but may depend
208                       Trade-offs involved in mate search may thus be crucial to determining how densi
209                                       Finite mate search rate triggers Allee effects in our model and
210 y occurs when fecundity costs are imposed on mate search, and provides an explanation for why Allee e
211 ty, which functions to promote male-specific mate-searching behavior.
212 estosterone concentrations during their peak mating season compared to the controls (p </= 0.05), whi
213                   Similar effects during the mating season in wild Arctic foxes may affect mating beh
214 density) and partly to nonrandom patterns of mate sharing.
215                    Discrete polymorphisms in mating strategies are widespread and offer a good opport
216 hanism underlying the expression of discrete mating strategies in the rock-paper-scissors (RPS) game.
217 nd offspring and among siblings over optimal mating strategies.
218                  We developed an alternative mating strategy model and analysed allele frequency dyna
219 ty of precopulatory sexual selection on male mating success (Bateman gradient) and the covariance bet
220 timates of mutational variance (VM) for male mating success and competitive fitness are not significa
221 an gradient) and the covariance between male mating success and postcopulatory paternity share.
222 ed measures of sexual selection, we recorded mating success and reproductive success over time, using
223 h aimed at quantifying relationships between mating success and sexually dimorphic traits (e.g., orna
224 at a significant portion of the variation in mating success observed in animal populations could be e
225 asured the behaviour, social environment and mating success of about 300 male stream water striders,
226 ategy could be successful by quantifying the mating success of bower-holding versus non-bower-holding
227              However, an individual's female mating success seems to negatively affect its own male r
228 nce improved the amount of variation in male mating success we explained statistically by 30-274%.
229  for cycling females, and (3) increases male mating success with their victims in the future.
230 henotype- and context-dependent selection on mating success, we repeatedly measured the behaviour, so
231 yakuba females and a decrease in conspecific mating success.
232 ns only a modest portion of the variation in mating success.
233  MMB is present, it interferes with nematode mating, suggesting that MMB might mimic sex pheromone in
234                    In plants, transitions in mating system from outcrossing to self-fertilization are
235                     Our results confirm that mating system manipulation disproportionately influences
236              We examined the consequences of mating system transition for reproductive barriers in 19
237 idiomycetes, C. amylolentus has a tetrapolar mating system with 2 MAT loci (P/R and HD) located on di
238         We examined the relationship between mating system, floral morphology, interspecific and inte
239 , an insight that applies to any iteroparous mating system.
240 mice and old-field mice that differ in their mating systems and parental behaviours.
241 first global biogeographic analysis of plant mating systems based on 624 published studies from 492 t
242                  These results indicate that mating systems can vary substantially within a species a
243 pathogenic Cryptococcus species have bipolar mating systems with a single large mating type (MAT) loc
244 lf-compatible (SC) and mixed population (MP) mating systems, and characterized pollen-pistil interact
245  south certainly have the potential to alter mating systems, breeding synchrony, and mate monopolizat
246           We emphasize the crucial role that mating systems, fitness trade-offs and the evolving sex
247  it to provide a wide range of scenarios for mating systems, selection, population size and structure
248 avior important for the acquisition of food, mates, territory, and social status.
249 zed mice and efficiently transmitted to cage-mates, the mutant colonized less efficiently, shed at lo
250  Lethal overexpression of actin results from mating this engineered strain with a strain containing t
251 r CSC concentration in vivo Finally, females mated to males that were exposed to 160 microg/ml CSC ne
252         Using sex-peptide-expressing "pseudo-mated" trainers, we find that robust courtship memory el
253           The multidrug and toxin extrusion (MATE) transporter family comprises 70 members in the Med
254 udy reveals not only functional diversity of MATE transporters and regulatory mechanisms in legumes a
255                                     Meth and mating-treated males showed significant impairment of in
256 e bipolar mating systems with a single large mating type (MAT) locus that represents a derived state
257                                 Although (+) mating type appeared to be more virulent, most of our cl
258 ognition in both ciliates, the mechanisms of mating type determination differ widely, ranging from Me
259               hCG signaling activates silent mating type information regulation 2 homolog 1 (SIRT1),
260 ciated with a significant increase in silent mating type information regulation 2 homologue 1 (SIRT1)
261                           KEY POINTS: Silent mating type information regulation 2 homologue 1 (SIRT1)
262  silencing defect was not limited to cryptic mating type loci and was associated with broad changes i
263                   Here, we characterized the mating type locus of M. irregularis and the mating type
264 long been known to present a wide variety of mating type numbers and modes of inheritance, but only r
265  mating type locus of M. irregularis and the mating type ratio of 17 clinical isolates in China.
266    Our results suggest that the frequency of mating type switch might control the trade-off between d
267 ological processes, such as budding, mating, mating type switch, consumption of nutrients, and cell d
268 d Th-1, Th-2 and Th-17 cells numbers in each mating type treated mice showed that the severity and di
269 ty and disease progress were enhanced in (+) mating type treated mice.
270 ut appeared to be more virulent than the (-) mating type.
271  clinical isolates presented belonged to (-) mating type.
272 xceptions are synIII, which lacks the silent mating-type cassettes, and synXII, specifically when the
273 r a range of ages (0.9-2.1 million years) in mating-type chromosomes.
274  New multiplex PCR assays were developed for mating-type determination for C. beticola.
275 ary strata did not include genes involved in mating-type determination.
276            The existence of strata devoid of mating-type genes, despite the lack of sexual antagonism
277 ent to disrupt chromatin silencing and yeast mating-type identity as indicated by a lack of growth re
278 c closeness and the similarity of their MTL (mating-type like) loci, some Metschnikowia species may p
279 chromosomal fusion underlying the linkage of mating-type loci in fungi and provided evidence for mult
280 r alternative allele combinations at the two mating-type loci.
281 h genetically diverse partners, as inhibited mating-type switching causes mother cells to shun their
282  identity is determined by genes at the MAT (mating-type) locus; mating occurs between MATa and MATal
283 e is evidence suggesting virulence vary with mating types in fungi, including the Mucorales.
284 k of male/female roles associated with their mating types.
285 hism due to balancing selection on sexes and mating types.
286 erentially shared the larvae type that their mate was most likely to desire and also increased the qu
287       However, we also find that assortative mating was plastic, varying in strength over time and di
288 karyotes, bacterial regulation of eukaryotic mating was unexpected.
289 of stress hormones (corticosterone) in brood mates, we demonstrate that the social transfer of stress
290 ur when individuals are exposed to potential mates, which facilitate the expression of courtship beha
291  in both spermatophore regions shortly after mating, which may contribute to spermatophore digestion
292 t between same-sex siblings who compete over mates, while simultaneously forging alliances between op
293    Pioneers are also more likely to find and mate with genetically diverse partners, as inhibited mat
294 , arising when more polygynous males tend to mate with more polyandrous females, drastically decrease
295 ity of polyandrous populations where females mate with multiple males.
296 ding cycle increases chances that males will mate with them as they approach conception.
297 old lean and obese female C57BL6/J mice were mated with chow fed males.
298 he data show significant fitness benefits of mating with partners of an individual's own choice, high
299 semi-purified HFD (45% fat) 4 weeks prior to mating with WT/KO males or heterozygous males with an ER
300  structure, seasonal movements and access to mates within a single continuous social network in the S

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