Multiple sexual ornaments  

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-The '''handicap principle''' is a [[hypothesis]] originally proposed in 1975 by [[biology|biologist]] [[Amotz Zahavi]] to explain how [[evolution]] may lead to "honest" or reliable [[Signalling theory|signaling]] between animals which have an obvious motivation to bluff or deceive each other. 
-==See also==+Many species have '''multiple sexual ornaments''', whereby females [[sexual selection|select mating partners]] using several cues instead of only one cue. Whereas this phenomenon is self-evident and hence long recognized, adaptive explanations of why females use several instead of only one [[Signalling theory|signal]] have been formulated relatively recently. Several hypotheses exist, but mutually exclusive tests are still lacking.
-*[[Aposematism]]+
-*[[Multiple sexual ornaments]]+
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Many species have multiple sexual ornaments, whereby females select mating partners using several cues instead of only one cue. Whereas this phenomenon is self-evident and hence long recognized, adaptive explanations of why females use several instead of only one signal have been formulated relatively recently. Several hypotheses exist, but mutually exclusive tests are still lacking.




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