All Stories

  1. Why are female color polymorphisms rare in territorial damselflies?
  2. Causes and Consequences of Behavioral Interference between Species
  3. Experimental test of the mechanism underlying sexual segregation at communal roosts of harvestmen (Prionostemma spp.)
  4. Sexual Selection and Speciation ☆
  5. An assessment of phylogenetic tools for analyzing the interplay between interspecific interactions and phenotypic evolution
  6. The ecological and evolutionary stability of interspecific territoriality
  7. Seasonal polyphenism in wing coloration affects species recognition in rubyspot damselflies (Hetaerinaspp.)
  8. The Role of Wing Coloration in Sex Recognition and Competitor Recognition in Rubyspot Damselflies (Hetaerinaspp.)
  9. Reproductive interference explains persistence of aggression between species
  10. Loss of sexual dimorphism is associated with loss of lekking behavior in the green manakinXenopipo holochora
  11. Integrating Functional and Evolutionary Approaches to the Study of Color-Based Animal Signals
  12. Species differences and geographic variation in the communal roosting behavior ofPrionostemmaharvestmen in Central American rainforests
  13. Communal roosting sites are potential ecological traps: experimental evidence in a Neotropical harvestman
  14. Redesigning the genetic architecture of phenotypically plastic traits in a changing environment
  15. The evolutionary consequences of interspecific aggression
  16. The evolution of species recognition in competitive and mating contexts: the relative efficacy of alternative mechanisms of character displacement
  17. Patterns of Niche Partitioning and Alternative Reproductive Strategies in an East African Dung Beetle Assemblage
  18. New communal roosting tradition established through experimental translocation in a Neotropical harvestman
  19. Characterization of novel microsatellite loci for Hetaerina americana damselflies, and cross-amplification in other species
  20. Unraveling the true complexity of costly color signaling
  21. An assessment of marking techniques for odonates in the family Calopterygidae
  22. Characterization of 12 microsatellite loci in the waterfall damselfly (Paraphlebia zoe) for use in population genetic applications
  23. The Neuroecology of Competitor Recognition
  24. Multiple routes to reduced interspecific territorial fighting in Hetaerina damselflies
  25. The Evolution of Mate Preferences, Sensory Biases, and Indicator Traits
  26. Sexual Selection and Speciation
  27. The role of interspecific interference competition in character displacement and the evolution of competitor recognition
  28. Ornamental evolution in Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata): insights from sensory processing-based analyses of entire colour patterns
  29. Pronounced reproductive skew in a natural population of green swordtails,Xiphophorus helleri
  30. Food availability and parasite infection influence mating tactics in guppies (Poecilia reticulata)
  31. Evolutionary consequences of human disturbance in a rainforest bird species from Central Africa
  32. Extensive population genetic structure in the giraffe
  33. COMPETITIVE MIMICRY: SYNTHESIS OF A NEGLECTED CLASS OF MIMETIC RELATIONSHIPS
  34. Communal Roost Site Selection in a Neotropical Harvestman: Habitat Limitation vs. Tradition
  35. Environmental and genetic influences on mating strategies along a replicated food availability gradient in guppies (Poecilia reticulata)
  36. Tradition without social learning: scent-mark-based communal roost formation in a Neotropical harvestman (Prionostemma sp.)
  37. The effects of carotenoid and food availability on resistance to a naturally occurring parasite (Gyrodactylus turnbulli) in guppies (Poecilia reticulata)
  38. Environmental Change, Phenotypic Plasticity, and Genetic Compensation
  39. COUNTERGRADIENT VARIATION IN THE SEXUAL COLORATION OF GUPPIES (POECILIA RETICULATA): DROSOPTERIN SYNTHESIS BALANCES CAROTENOID AVAILABILITY
  40. COUNTERGRADIENT VARIATION IN THE SEXUAL COLORATION OF GUPPIES (POECILIA RETICULATA): DROSOPTERIN SYNTHESIS BALANCES CAROTENOID AVAILABILITY
  41. The effects of resource availability on alternative mating tactics in guppies (Poecilia reticulata)
  42. Individual colour patches as multicomponent signals
  43. Marginal Differentiation between the Sexual and General Carotenoid Pigmentation of Guppies (Poecilia reticulata) and a Possible Visual Explanation
  44. Carotenoid scarcity, synthetic pteridine pigments and the evolution of sexual coloration in guppies (Poecilia reticulata)
  45. Rain Forest Canopy Cover, Resource Availability, and Life History Evolution in Guppies
  46. RAIN FOREST CANOPY COVER, RESOURCE AVAILABILITY, AND LIFE HISTORY EVOLUTION IN GUPPIES
  47. Mechanisms for the formation and maintenance of traditional night roost aggregations in a territorial damselfly
  48. CAROTENOID LIMITATION AND MATE PREFERENCE EVOLUTION: A TEST OF THE INDICATOR HYPOTHESIS IN GUPPIES (POECILIA RETICULATA)
  49. CHARACTERISTICS AND POSSIBLE FUNCTIONS OF TRADITIONAL NIGHT ROOSTING AGGREGATIONS IN RUBYSPOT DAMSELFLIES
  50. CAROTENOID LIMITATION AND MATE PREFERENCE EVOLUTION: A TEST OF THE INDICATOR HYPOTHESIS IN GUPPIES (POECILIA RETICULATA)
  51. Carotenoid limitation of sexual coloration along an environmental gradient in guppies
  52. Sexual Selection and Survival Selection on Wing Coloration and Body Size in the Rubyspot Damselfly Hetaerina americana
  53. Intrasexual Competition Alone Favors a Sexually Dimorphic Ornament in the Rubyspot Damselfly Hetaerina americana
  54. INTRASEXUAL COMPETITION ALONE FAVORS A SEXUALLY DIMORPHIC ORNAMENT IN THE RUBYSPOT DAMSELFLY HETAERINA AMERICANA
  55. SEXUAL SELECTION AND SURVIVAL SELECTION ON WING COLORATION AND BODY SIZE IN THE RUBYSPOT DAMSELFLY HETAERINA AMERICANA
  56. Novel cost of a sexually selected trait in the rubyspot damselfly Hetaerina americana: conspicuousness to prey
  57. Genetic correlation complicates the interpretation of phylogenetic transitions in sexually selected traits
  58. Gibbon foraging decisions and the marginal value model
  59. Association among wild orang-utans: sociality, passive aggregations or chance?
  60. What are sisters good for?