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Can you still feel that moment of victory?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Historic Moment)
Fri Apr 11 13:00:25 2025

Date: Fri, 11 Apr 2025 12:00:23 -0500
From: "Historic Moment" <PatriotKeepsake@cellucaressugar.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Patriot Keepsake" <PatriotKeepsake@cellucaressugar.ru.com>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>

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Can you still feel that moment of victory?

http://cellucaressugar.ru.com/dL9Bz5mI9vQ9Psykx28WA-PzqNBzVUD9NywiKKeQJDzpg_6I0Q

http://cellucaressugar.ru.com/IfQJAwDOrAQo-WrF7-jIAwyEaYdbg57r4ybDFSEB8iGQ656C6Q

under of niche research, commented "It is very likely from an ecological point of view that all species, or at least all common species, consist of populations adapted to more than one niche". He gave as examples sexual size dimorphism and mimicry. In many cases where the male is short-lived and smaller than the female, he does not compete with her during her late pre-adult and adult life. Size difference may permit both sexes to exploit different niches. In elaborate cases of mimicry, such as the African butterfly Papilio dardanus, female morphs mimic a range of distasteful models called Batesian mimicry, often in the same region. The fitness of each type of mimic decreases as it becomes more common, so the polymorphism is maintained by frequency-dependent selection. Thus the efficiency of the mimicry is maintained in a much increased total population. However it can exist within one gender.:?ch. 13?

Female-limited polymorphism and sexual assault avoidance

Female-limited polymorphism in Papilio dardanus can be described as an outcome of sexual conflict. Cook et al. (1994) argued that the male-like phenotype in some females in P. dardanus population on Pemba Island, Tanzania functions to avoid detection from a mate-searching male. The researchers found that male mate preference is controlled by frequency-dependent selection, which means that the rare morph suffers less from mating attempt than the common morph. The reasons why females try to avoid male sexual harassment are that male mating attempt can reduce female fitness in many ways su

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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;">under of niche research, commented &quot;It is very likely from an ecological point of view that all species, or at least all common species, consist of populations adapted to more than one niche&quot;. He gave as examples sexual size dimorphism and mimicry. In many cases where the male is short-lived and smaller than the female, he does not compete with her during her late pre-adult and adult life. Size difference may permit both sexes to exploit different niches. In elaborate cases of mimicry, such as the African butterfly Papilio dardanus, female morphs mimic a range of distasteful models called Batesian mimicry, often in the same region. The fitness of each type of mimic decreases as it becomes more common, so the polymorphism is maintained by frequency-dependent selection. Thus the efficiency of the mimicry is maintained in a much increased total population. However it can exist within one gender.:?ch. 13? Female-limited polymorphism and sexual assault avoidance Female-limited polymorphism in Papilio dardanus can be described as an outcome of sexual conflict. Cook et al. (1994) argued that the male-like phenotype in some females in P. dardanus population on Pemba Island, Tanzania functions to avoid detection from a mate-searching male. The researchers found that male mate preference is controlled by frequency-dependent selection, which means that the rare morph suffers less from mating attempt than the common morph. The reasons why females try to avoid male sexual harassment are that male mating attempt can reduce female fitness in many ways su</div>
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