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Sexual selection in mammals : ウィキペディア英語版
Sexual selection in mammals

Sexual selection in mammals started with Charles Darwin’s observations concerning sexual selection, including sexual selection in humans, and in other mammals,〔Jones, A. G. & Ratterman, N. L. Mate choice and sexual selection: what have we learned since Darwin? Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 106 Suppl , 10001–8 (2009)〕 consisting of male-male competition and mate choice that mold the development of future phenotypes in a population for a given species.〔Cyrus Chu, C. Y. & Lee, R. D. Sexual dimorphism and sexual selection: a unified economic analysis. Theoretical population biology 82, 355–63 (2012)〕
==Elephant seals==

A good example of intrasexual selection, in which males fight for dominance over a harem of females, is the elephant seal - large, oceangoing mammals of the genus ''Mirounga''. There are two species: the northern (''M. angustirostris'') and southern elephant seal (''M. leonina'') - the largest carnivore living today. Both species show extreme sexual dimorphism, possibly the largest of any mammal, with southern males typically five to six times heavier than the females. While the females average and long, the bulls average and long.
The record-sized bull, shot in Possession Bay, South Georgia, on February 28, 1913, measured long and was estimated to weigh .〔Wood, The Guinness Book of Animal Facts and Feats. Sterling Pub Co Inc (1983), ISBN 978-0-85112-235-9〕 The maximum weight of a female is with a length of .
Males arrive in the colonies before the females and fight for control of harems. Large body size confers advantages in fighting. The agonistic behaviour of the bulls gives rise to a dominance hierarchy, with access to harems and breeding activity being determined by rank. The dominant bulls or "harem masters" establish harems of several dozen females. The least successful males have no harems, but may try to copulate with a harem male's females when the dominant male is not looking. A dominant male must stay in his territory to defend it, which can mean months without eating, living on his store of blubber. Some males have stayed ashore for more than three months without food. Two fighting males use their weight and canine teeth against each other. The outcome is rarely fatal, and the defeated bull will flee; however, bulls suffer severe tears and cuts. Males commonly vocalize with a coughing roar that serves in both individual recognition and size assessment. Conflicts between high-ranking males are more often resolved with posturing and vocalizing than with physical contact.〔
In the case of ''intrasexual selection'', adorned males may gain a reproductive advantage without the intervention of female preference. This advantage will be conferred by weapons used in the process of resolving disputes, such as those over territorial rights. The use of sexual ornamentation as a signaling device to create a dominance hierarchy among males, also known as a pecking order, allows struggle to proceed without excessive injury or fatality. It is predominantly when two opposing males are so closely matched, as would be found in males not having established themselves in a dominance hierarchy, that asymmetries cannot be found and the confrontation escalates to a point where the asymmetries must be proved by aggressive use of ornamentation.
How often males will physically engage each other, and in what manner, can best be understood by applying game theory developed for biology, most notably by John Maynard Smith.〔Maynard Smith, J (1982) ''Evolution and the Theory of Games''. Cambridge University Press, pp. 131-137. ISBN 0-521-28884-3〕

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