“…Nevertheless even when mechanisms of sexual selection are antagonistic and females do not exert a preference for dominant males, it remains possible for dominant males to gain a mating advantage over their competitors through force or coercion, increasing their own mating opportunities and ultimately overriding female mate choice (Qvarnstr枚m & Forsgren, ; Wong & Candolin, ). Evidence of conflict between male鈥搈ale competition and female mate choice has been observed in flour beetles (Harano et al ., ; Yamane et al ., ; Okada et al ., ), cockroaches (Moore & Moore, ), bitterlings (Reichard et al ., ; Casalini et al ., ), brown trout (Petersson et al ., ) and water striders (Sih et al ., ). The consequences of mating with dominant, nonpreferred males can be severe, for example female cockroaches Nauphoeta cinerea mated to nonpreferred males had a reduced lifespan and produced fewer offspring (Moore et al ., , ).…”