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1 nt for women and men, respectively (assuming monogamy).
2 otential adaptive basis for perennial social monogamy.
3 y explanations about the biological bases of monogamy.
4 xplain the coexistence of gregariousness and monogamy.
5 n lower than expected under random mating or monogamy.
6 cross vertebrates when species transition to monogamy.
7 ve been unable to resolve the root causes of monogamy.
8 cs is needed to avoid violating entanglement monogamy.
9  a consequence rather than a cause of social monogamy.
10          Concordance was not associated with monogamy.
11     Conflict over remating can also generate monogamy.
12  regulating social behaviors associated with monogamy.
13 Avpr1a locus contributes to the evolution of monogamy.
14 ive strategy of A. afarensis was principally monogamy.
15 ities, male-biased sex ratios, and long-term monogamy.
16 males have access to numerous males, sustain monogamy?
17 ility of a shift to social monogamy, whereas monogamy allows the secondary adoption of paternal care
18 y masculinisation of the transcriptome under monogamy, although this depends on tissue and sex.
19      The decline of polygyny and the rise of monogamy among complex, stratified societies characteriz
20  proposed to explain the evolution of social monogamy among mammals: as a male mate-guarding strategy
21 ork to test for correlated evolution between monogamy and a range of traits to evaluate the competing
22 ested hypotheses related to the evolution of monogamy and affiliation.
23 dence of correlated evolution between social monogamy and both female ranging patterns and biparental
24 sex difference in pathways underlying social monogamy and demonstrates a fundamental disconnect betwe
25 n a simple contrast between resource defence monogamy and female defence polygyny.
26 nsignis), we modeled the interaction between monogamy and female life history.
27      Biparental care facilitates both social monogamy and genetic monogamy; frogs that work together
28                                              Monogamy and high paternal investment were associated wi
29 ant coevolution with traits including social monogamy and litter size.
30                             The evolution of monogamy and paternal care in humans is often argued to
31                          The results suggest monogamy and paternal investment can alter the evolution
32 of these aspects of maternal life history to monogamy and paternal investment in offspring is not wel
33  age range and to investigate the effects of monogamy and relationship duration on incidence.
34              We also evaluated the effect of monogamy and relationship duration on transmission incid
35 curacy and assume unrealistic assumptions of monogamy and synchronized generations.
36 tes for males are higher, fitness payoffs to monogamy and the maintenance of a single partner can be
37 opulations characterized by socially imposed monogamy, and it contains a complete distribution of sur
38 as sharing food beyond the immediate family, monogamy, and other forms of reproductive leveling.
39 urred during periods of sexual abstinence or monogamy, and were strongly associated with cumulative l
40 n intensity (intense [polygamy] vs. relaxed [monogamy]) and metapopulation structure (absent vs. pres
41 in rural Tanzania, where polygyny and serial monogamy are common.
42  that modern transitions to socially imposed monogamy are driven by cultural group selection.
43                    Our findings suggest that monogamy arose repeatedly under similar socioecological
44  than paternal care, drives the evolution of monogamy, as it secures a partner and ensures paternity
45 ed in the behavioral differences relevant to monogamy, as oxytocin and vasopressin influence pair-bon
46        Equally important, the observation of monogamy at the level of flowers is in line with the mat
47 other animal phylads; (ii) the prevalence of monogamy at the time of evolutionary origin; and (iii) t
48 lleviated by religion and culturally imposed monogamy, both of which also find parallels among social
49 fects are even larger when the assumption of monogamy can be relaxed, but are moderated by other beha
50                      The evolution of social monogamy does not appear to have been associated with a
51                  Here, we show that the Bell monogamy does not hold universally and that in fact the
52          Competing explanations suggest that monogamy either i) reduces reproductive inequality, fost
53                                   So how did monogamy first evolve?
54 facilitates both social monogamy and genetic monogamy; frogs that work together to raise their offspr
55 acilitate mate choice, rival deterrence, and monogamy, gating spread of inferior genes from promiscuo
56 t competition over heritable wealth promotes monogamy globally.
57 d that both males and females evolving under monogamy had higher relative reproductive tissue investm
58                                       Social monogamy has evolved in nonhuman mammals where breeding
59   Primates are unusual among mammals because monogamy has evolved independently in all of the major c
60                      The evolution of social monogamy has intrigued biologists for over a century.
61 he history of Indo-European societies, where monogamy has long been normative and closely associated
62 nt to the next generation, the constraint of monogamy has no impact on the qualities of the final pop
63                                Forms of Bell monogamy have been linked to the no-signaling principle,
64 ss and underlying male harm mechanisms under monogamy (i.e. low male competition/harm) vs. polyandry
65 ionship between microsatellite structure and monogamy in 21 vole species.
66 es of great interest to researchers studying monogamy in animals.
67 er monogamous vertebrates; the prevalence of monogamy in birds may have increased opportunities for i
68                         The origin of social monogamy in primates is best explained by long lactation
69  model is inconsistent: While it may explain monogamy in some language families, these dynamics do no
70 (Oxtr) is critical for the display of social monogamy in these animals.
71 ptomic mechanism underlying the evolution of monogamy in vertebrates.
72 ght provide a mechanism for the evolution of monogamy in voles.
73 control of several behaviors associated with monogamy, including pair bonding, paternal care and mate
74                    Behaviors associated with monogamy, including pair-bond formation, are facilitated
75  investigated and found that the sign of the monogamy is a preserved quantity under the decoherence.
76                           However, normative monogamy is also found in many societies beyond this his
77                                        Queen monogamy is ancestral among bees, ants, and wasps (Order
78 s is of solitary individuals and that social monogamy is derived almost exclusively from this social
79 ifficulties associated with deciding whether monogamy is enforced by one sex or the other.
80 compelling explanation for the appearance of monogamy is male infanticide.
81                        Our results show that monogamy is strongly associated with land privatization
82                                              Monogamy is the dominant pattern everywhere, but having
83 by alternative benefits associated with male monogamy (monogyny).
84 y with the third observer, a property called monogamy of Bell violations.
85                       We conjecture that the monogamy of coherence is a conserved property under loca
86 y of quantum coherence, as defined using the monogamy of coherence, is investigated and found that th
87 s, ranging from high promiscuity to absolute monogamy of domain surface employed, with both multiple
88 out the neuromolecular mechanisms underlying monogamy on a genomic scale.
89 le-biased genes, and experimentally imposing monogamy on Drosophila melanogaster has led to a relativ
90 yielded mixed results, and the effect of non-monogamy on song evolution remains unclear.
91 oobscura, to 150 generations of experimental monogamy or elevated polyandry.
92  paternal half-siblings also indicate serial monogamy or polygyny.
93 uch as sedentism, the shift from polygyny to monogamy or the increase of patrilocality.
94             Although common in birds, social monogamy, or pair-living, is rare among mammals because
95  secondary factor favouring perennial social monogamy, particularly in species with slower life-histo
96 productive success across temperatures under monogamy, polyandry resulted in a maximum decrease of fe
97 nd food sharing across mating systems (i.e., monogamy, polygyny, promiscuity), and we assess which sy
98 tight Bell inequalities that do not obey the monogamy principle for any number of more than three obs
99 e sexual selection, and that selection under monogamy removes this constraint.
100 ing of the neurobiological basis not only of monogamy, social attachment and nurturing behaviors but
101                                Regardless of monogamy status or relationship duration, there was a si
102 ace-time correlations violating entanglement monogamy, such as those arising in black holes.
103 mestic dogs (FRDs) contrasts with the social monogamy typical of gray wolves and all other wild canid
104                                       Social monogamy, typically characterized by the formation of a
105                         We also simulate the monogamy violation with polarization-entangled photons,
106 n alternative approach to OTCs, allowing for monogamy violations.
107 hese results provide the first evidence that monogamy was critical in the evolution of eusociality, s
108 f between search and survival, combined with monogamy when females were searching.
109 creases the probability of a shift to social monogamy, whereas monogamy allows the secondary adoption
110 onsiderable importance for studies of social monogamy, which only appears in a small subset of primat
111  patterns evolved decreased expression under monogamy, while genes with female-biased expression evol
112  costs and benefits to females of polyandry, monogamy with a single copulation, and monogamy with rep
113 ndry, monogamy with a single copulation, and monogamy with repeat copulations.
114 . maniculatus bairdii) to social and genetic monogamy with substantial paternal investment (P. califo

 
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