All Stories

  1. Male and female crickets modulate their courtship behaviour depending on female experience with mate availability
  2. Flexible mate choice when mates are rare and time is short
  3. Juvenile hormone titer and advertised quality are associated with timing of early spring activity in Polistes dominulus foundresses
  4. Island hopping introduces Polynesian field crickets to novel environments, genetic bottlenecks and rapid evolution
  5. Quantitative genetic variation in courtship song and its covariation with immune function and sperm quality in the field cricket Teleogryllus oceanicus
  6. Release from bats: genetic distance and sensoribehavioural regression in the Pacific field cricket, Teleogryllus oceanicus
  7. ASYMMETRIC MATING PREFERENCES ACCOMMODATED THE RAPID EVOLUTIONARY LOSS OF A SEXUAL SIGNAL
  8. Preexisting behavior renders a mutation adaptive: flexibility in male phonotaxis behavior and the loss of singing ability in the field cricket Teleogryllus oceanicus
  9. Rapid evolution and sexual signals
  10. Rapid evolutionary change in a sexual signal: genetic control of the mutation ‘flatwing’ that renders male field crickets (Teleogryllus oceanicus) mute
  11. Blueprint for a High-Performance Biomaterial: Full-Length Spider Dragline Silk Genes
  12. Silent night: adaptive disappearance of a sexual signal in a parasitized population of field crickets
  13. Sexual Conflict. Monographs in Behavior and Ecology. By Göran  Arnqvist and Locke  Rowe. Princeton (New Jersey): Princeton University Press . $99.50 (hardcover); $39.50 (paper). xiii + 330 p; ill.; author and subject indexes. ISBN: 0–691–12217–2 (hc...