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      How Sex-Biased Dispersal Affects Sexual Conflict over Care.

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          Abstract

          Existing models of parental investment have mainly focused on interactions at the level of the family and have paid much less attention to the impact of population-level processes. Here we extend classical models of parental care to assess the impact of population structure and limited dispersal. We find that sex differences in dispersal substantially affect the amount of care provided by each parent, with the more philopatric sex providing the majority of care to young. This effect is most pronounced in highly viscous populations: in such cases, when classical models would predict stable biparental care, inclusion of a modest sex difference in dispersal leads to uniparental care by the philopatric sex. In addition, mating skew also affects sex differences in parental investment, with the more numerous sex providing most of the care. However, the effect of mating skew holds only when parents care for their own offspring. When individuals breed communally, we recover the previous finding that the more philopatric sex provides most of the care even when it is the rarer sex. We conclude that sex-biased dispersal is likely to be an important yet currently overlooked driver of sex differences in parental care.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am. Nat.
          The American naturalist
          University of Chicago Press
          1537-5323
          0003-0147
          May 2017
          : 189
          : 5
          Article
          10.1086/691330
          28410027
          c1e232d8-0fcb-4eba-b670-9fccd5e0d322
          History

          game theory,kin competition,kin selection,negotiation,parental effort,sex differences

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