Sex, Size and Gender Roles Evolutionary Studies of Sexual Size Dimorphism

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2007-08-23
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
List Price: $149.33

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Summary

Why do males and females frequently differ so markedly in body size and morphology? Sex, Size, and Gender Roles is the first book to investigate the genetic, developmental, and physiological basis of sexual size dimorphism found within and among the major taxonomic groups of animals. Carefully edited by a team of world-renowned specialists in the field to ensure a coherence of style and approach between chapters, it presents a compendium of studies into the evolution, adaptive significance, and developmental basis of gender differences in body size and morphology. Adaptive hypotheses allude to gender-specific reproductive roles and associated differences in trophic ecologies, life history strategies, and sexual selection. This "adaptationist" approach is balanced by more mechanistic studies of the genetic, developmental and physiological basis of sexual size dimorphism to provide a comprehensive and authoritative overview of the subject. Throughout the volume the emphasis is on sexual dimorphism in overall size; however, the scope of enquiry encompasses gender differences in body shape, the size and structure of secondary sexual characteristics, patterns of growth (ontogeny), and patterns of gene regulation. This advanced, research level text is suitable for graduate level students and researchers in the fields of evolutionary biology, behavioral ecology, physiology, developmental biology, and genetics. It will also be of relevance and use to non-biologists from fields such as anthropology and gender studies.

Author Biography


Daphne J. Fairbairn is Professor of Biology at the University of California at Riverside, USA.
Wolf U. Blanckenhorn is Titularprofessor at the Zoologisches Museum, Universitat Zurich, Switzerland. Tamas Szekely is Reader in Evolutionary Biology at the Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Bath, UK.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Enigma of Sexual Size Dimorphism
Macro-patterns: explaining broad-scale patterns of variation in sexual size dimorphism
Sexual Size Dimorphism in Mammals
Sexual Size Dimorphism in Birds
The Evolution of Sexual Size Dimorphism in Reptiles
Sexual Size Dimorphism in Amphibians: an overview
Rensch's Rule in Insects: patterns among and within species
Sexual Size Dimorphism in Spiders: patterns and processes
Micro-patterns: case studies of patterns and evolutionary processes within and among species
Variation in Selection, Phenotypic Plasticity and the Ecology of Sexual Size dimorphism in Two Seed-Feeding Beetles
Sexual Dimorphism in Water Striders: a case study of adaptation in response to sexually antagonistic selection
Case Studies of the Differential Equilibrium Hypothesis of Sexual Size Dimorphism in Dung Fly Species
The Genetic Integration of Sexually Dimorphic Traits in the Dioecious Plant
Dimorphism in the Hartebeest
Sexual Size Dimorphism and Offspring Vulnerability in Birds
Variation in Sexual Size Dimorphism within a Widespread Lizard Species
Phylogenetic Analysis of Sexual Dimorphism in Eye-Lid Geckos (Eublepharidae): the effects of male combat, courtship behaviour, egg size and body size
Proximate developmental and genetic mechanisms
Sex Differences: genetic, physiological, and ecological mechanisms
The Genetic Architecture of Sexual Dimorphism: the potential roles of genomic imprinting and condition dependence
Irreconcilable Differences: when sexual dimorphism fails to resolve sexual conflict
Development of Sexual Size Dimorphism in Lizards: testosterone as a bipotential growth regulator
Sexual Differences in Insect Development Time in Relation to Sexual Size Dimorphism
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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