Male sexual attractiveness predicts differential ovulatory shifts in female extra-pair attraction and male mate retention
Abstract
Because ancestral women faced trade-offs in choosing mates, they may have evolved to pursue a dual-mating strategy in which they secured investment through one partner and obtained good genes through others. The dual-mating theory predicts that women will display greater interest in extra-pair sex near ovulation, especially if they are mated to a primary male partner who is low in sexual attractiveness. Forty-three normally ovulating women rated their partner's sexual attractiveness and separately reported their own desires and their partner's mate retention behaviors at high and low fertility (confirmed using luteinizing hormone tests). In the high-fertility session relative to the low, women who assessed their partners as being lower in sexual attractiveness reported greater extra-pair desires and more expressed love and attention from their male partners. Women's desire for their own partners did not differ significantly between high and low-fertility sessions.
- Publication:
-
Evolution and Human Behavior
- Pub Date:
- January 2006
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2006EHumB..27..247P
- Keywords:
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- Ovulatory cycle;
- Mate guarding;
- Sexual conflict;
- Conception;
- Sexual desire;
- Female sexuality