“…Yet, not all studies that have looked for sex differences in polygynous species have found them (Tidière et al, 2014(Tidière et al, , 2015Toïgo & Gaillard, 2003), and more generally, the evidence for a direct role of sexual selection on rates of ageing is equivocal (Bonduriansky, Maklakov, Zajitschek, & Brooks, 2008;Graves, 2007;Maklakov, Bonduriansky, & Brooks, 2009). This is likely because males and females can compete in different ways, the traits involved can entail different costs, and might also be expressed at different stages of lifespan (Clutton-Brock, 1983;Ralls & Mesnick, 2009;Stockley & Bro-Jørgensen, 2011;Tompkins & Anderson, 2019). In this context, it is important to appreciate that sex differences in survival rates and senescence depend on the characteristics of the two sexes which, in turn, depend on the specific selection pressures generated by intraspecific competition in the two sexes rather than on sex differences in reproductive variance (Clutton-Brock, 1983).…”