All Stories

  1. Colour alone matters: no predator generalization among morphs of an aposematic moth
  2. How to fight multiple enemies: target-specific chemical defences in an aposematic moth
  3. Colour and luminance contrasts predict the human detection of natural stimuli in complex visual environments
  4. Behavioural, ecological, and evolutionary aspects of diversity in frog colour patterns
  5. Poison frogs
  6. Mind the gap: treefalls as drivers of parental trade‐offs
  7. Colour polymorphism torn apart by opposing positive frequency-dependent selection, yet maintained in space
  8. Frequency-dependent flight activity in the colour polymorphic wood tiger moth
  9. Visual illusions in predator–prey interactions: birds find moving patterned prey harder to catch
  10. Aposematism
  11. Different reactions to aposematic prey in 2 geographically distant populations of great tits
  12. Differential detectability of polymorphic warning signals under varying light environments
  13. Paradox lost: variable colour-pattern geometry is associated with differences in movement in aposematic frogs
  14. Strange parental decisions: fathers of the dyeing poison frog deposit their tadpoles in pools occupied by large cannibals
  15. Sexual dimorphism and intra-populational colour pattern variation in the aposematic frog Dendrobates tinctorius
  16. The Spatial Pattern of Natural Selection When Selection Depends on Experience
  17. Matching and Symmetry in the Frequency Recognition Curve of the Poison Frog Epipedobates trivittatus