Middlebury

BIOL 0235

Sexual Selection

Sexual Selection
Charles Darwin described sexual selection as the mode of selection that favors traits that enhance an individual’s reproductive success. Sexual selection has shaped behavior, morphology, physiology, and cognitive ability in many species. We will first read portions of Darwin’s The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex followed by journal articles representative of the major questions in the field. Topics will include: mate choice, intrasexual competition, alternative mating strategies, and the role of sexual selection in the evolution of the brain. Students will lead class discussions and write a final paper on sexual selection. This course can be taken for Neuroscience and Biology major credit. (BIOL 0140 and 0145)
Subject:
Biology
Department:
Biology
Division:
Natural Sciences
Requirements Fulfilled:
SCI
Equivalent Courses:

Sections

Winter 2016

BIOL0235A-W16 Lecture (Spritzer)

Winter 2014

BIOL0235A-W14 Lecture (Spritzer)

Winter 2010

BIOL0235A-W10 Lecture (Spritzer)

Winter 2008

BIOL0235A-W08 Lecture (Spritzer)