Content
2016, Volume 27, Issue 4
- 1132-1140 A hierarchical analysis of incest avoidance in a cooperative breeder
by Janis L. Dickinson & Çağlar Akçay & Elise Ferree & Caitlin Stern - 1141-1148 Attendance, but not performance, predicts good genes in a lek-breeding treefrog
by Valentina Botto & Sergio Castellano - 1149-1157 Social interactions generate mutually reinforcing selection for male aggression in Lake Eyre dragons
by Claire A. McLean & Rita Chan & Ashton L. Dickerson & Adnan Moussalli & Devi Stuart-Fox - 1158-1166 Consequences of natal philopatry for reproductive success and mate choice in an Alpine rodent
by Vicente García-Navas & Timothée Bonnet & Dominique Waldvogel & Glauco Camenisch & Erik Postma - 1167-1171 Does antiparasite behavior improve with experience? An experimental test of the priming hypothesis
by Scott M. Villa & Heidi E. Campbell & Sarah E. Bush & Dale H. Clayton - 1172-1181 Mothers teach daughters because daughters teach granddaughters: the evolution of sex-biased transmission
by Matthew R. Zefferman - 1182-1189 The importance of being yellow: visual over chemical cues in gender recognition in a social wasp
by Federico Cappa & Laura Beani & Rita Cervo - 1190-1197 The "strength of weak ties" and helminth parasitism in giraffe social networks
by Kimberly L. VanderWaal & Vincent Obanda & George P. Omondi & Brenda McCowan & Hui Wang & Hsieh Fushing & Lynne A. Isbell - 1198-1205 Nestling sex and plumage color predict food allocation by barn swallow parents
by Andrea Romano & Gaia Bazzi & Manuela Caprioli & Margherita Corti & Alessandra Costanzo & Diego Rubolini & Nicola Saino - 1206-1215 A prison effect in a wild population: a scarcity of females induces homosexual behaviors in males
by Xavier Bonnet & Ana Golubović & Dragan Arsovski & Sonja Dorđević & Jean-Marie Ballouard & Bogoljub Sterijovski & Rastko Ajtić & Christophe Barbraud & Liljana Tomović - 1216-1222 Evidence for comparative decision making in female crickets
by Eileen Gabel & R. Matthias Hennig - 1223-1234 Effectiveness of social information used by seabirds searching for unpredictable and ephemeral prey
by Charlotte Boyd & Daniel Grünbaum & George L. Hunt & André E. Punt & Henri Weimerskirch & Sophie Bertrand - 1235-1246 Interacting with the enemy: indirect effects of personality on conspecific aggression in crickets
by Francesca Santostefano & Alastair J. Wilson & Yimen G. Araya-Ajoy & Niels J. Dingemanse - 1247-1254 Manipulating carer number versus brood size: complementary but not equivalent ways of quantifying carer effects on offspring
by A.L. Liebl & L.E. Browning & A.F. Russell - 1255-1262 Breeding experience, but not mate retention, determines the breeding performance in a passerine bird
by Lei Lv & Jan Komdeur & Jianqiang Li & Isabella B.R. Scheiber & Zhengwang Zhang - 1263-1268 Wherever I may roam: social viscosity and kin affiliation in a wild population despite natal dispersal
by Ada M. Grabowska-Zhang & Camilla A. Hinde & Colin J. Garroway & Ben C. Sheldon
2016, Volume 27, Issue 3
- 2-5 Evidence for conditional cooperation in biparental care systems? A comment on Johnstone et al
by Emmi Schlicht & Peter Santema & Robert Schlicht & Bart Kempenaers - 6-7 Evidence for conditional cooperation: a response to Schlicht et al
by Rufus A. Johnstone & Andrea Manica & Annette L. Fayet & Mary Caswell Stoddard & Miguel A. Rodriguez-Gironés & Camilla A. Hinde - 685-694 Maternal effects as a mechanism for manipulating male care and resolving sexual conflict over care
by Matthieu Paquet & Per T. Smiseth - 695-696 An empiricists’ guide to sexual conflict over parental investment: a comment on Paquet and Smiseth
by Rebecca M. Kilner - 696-696 Expanding investigations of manipulation via maternal effects: a comment on Paquet and Smiseth
by Kyle Summers - 696-697 Maternal effects likely coevolve with plasticity in male care: a comment on Paquet and Smiseth
by Suzanne H. Alonzo - 697-698 Constraints and clutch size: a comment on Paquet and Smiseth
by Nick J. Royle - 698-699 Maternal effects and female manipulation: a response to comments on Paquet and Smiseth
by Matthieu Paquet & Per T. Smiseth - 700-707 Locomotory mimicry in ant-like spiders
by Ximena J. Nelson & Ashley Card - 708-716 Immediate and carry-over effects of perceived predation risk on communication behavior in wild birds
by Robin N. Abbey-Lee & Aurélien Kaiser & Alexia Mouchet & Niels J. Dingemanse - 717-724 Thermal tolerance may cause sexual segregation in sexually dimorphic species living in hot environments
by Juan C. Alonso & Iván Salgado & Carlos Palacín - 725-730 Bitter tastes can influence birds’ dietary expansion strategies
by John Skelhorn - 731-740 Bees learn preferences for plant species that offer only pollen as a reward
by Avery L. Russell & Rebekah E. Golden & Anne S. Leonard & Daniel R. Papaj - 741-747 Roads are no barrier for dispersing red squirrels in an urban environment
by Karen Fey & Suvi Hämäläinen & Vesa Selonen - 748-756 Paying the energetic costs of reproduction: reliance on postpartum foraging and stored reserves
by Heiko G. Rödel & Teresa G. Valencak & Alexandra Handrek & Raquel Monclús - 757-765 Resource-defense polygyny and self-limitation of population density in free-ranging guanacos
by Andrea Marino & Victoria Rodríguez & Gustavo Pazos - 766-776 Causes, mechanisms, and consequences of contest competition among female mountain gorillas in Rwanda
by Cyril C. Grueter & Andrew M. Robbins & Didier Abavandimwe & Veronica Vecellio & Felix Ndagijimana & Sylvia Ortmann & Tara S. Stoinski & Martha M. Robbins - 777-783 Heterogeneity in reproductive success explained by individual differences in bite rate and mass change
by Uriel Gélin & Graeme Coulson & Marco Festa-Bianchet - 784-792 Do molt-migrant songbirds optimize migration routes based on primary productivity?
by Eli S. Bridge & Jeremy D. Ross & Andrea J. Contina & Jeffrey F. Kelly - 793-802 Spoils of war and peace: enemy adoption and queen-right colony fusion follow costly intraspecific conflict in acacia ants
by Kathleen P. Rudolph & Jay P. McEntee - 803-809 Site-specific flight speeds of nonbreeding Pacific dunlins as a measure of the quality of a foraging habitat
by Florian Reurink & Nathan Hentze & Jay Rourke & Ron Ydenberg - 810-819 Female sea lamprey shift orientation toward a conspecific chemical cue to escape a sensory trap
by Cory O. Brant & Nicholas S. Johnson & Ke Li & Tyler J. Buchinger & Weiming Li - 820-828 Social behavior and activity are decoupled in larval and adult fruit flies
by Blake B. Anderson & Andrew Scott & Reuven Dukas - 829-834 Do individual breeding experience and parental effort affect breeding season length in blackbirds?
by Łukasz Jankowiak & Dariusz Wysocki - 835-841 Plaintive cuckoos do not select tailorbird hosts that match the phenotypes of their own eggs
by Canchao Yang & Qiuli Huang & Longwu Wang & Aiwu Jiang & Bård G. Stokke & Frode Fossøy & Odd Helge Tunheim & Eivin Røskaft & Wei Liang & Anders P. Møller - 842-850 Environmental complexity favors the evolution of learning
by Slimane Dridi & Laurent Lehmann - 851-856 Sexual cannibalism in a facultative parthenogen: the springbok mantis (Miomantis caffra)
by Leilani A. Walker & Gregory I. Holwell - 857-864 Behavioral and morphological responses to perceived predation risk: a field experiment in passerines
by Robin N. Abbey-Lee & Kimberley J. Mathot & Niels J. Dingemanse - 865-875 Assessing vector navigation in long-distance migrating birds
by Susanne Åkesson & Giuseppe Bianco - 876-885 Cautious versus desperado males: predation risk affects courtship intensity but not female choice in a wolf spider
by Ann L. Rypstra & Sean E. Walker & Matthew H. Persons - 886-894 Fluctuating sexual selection and the evolution of a courtship strategy
by Chang S. Han & Robert C. Brooks & Piotr G. Jablonski - 895-902 Contact pheromones of 2 sympatric beetles are modified by the host plant and affect mate choice
by Huai-Jun Xue & Jia-Ning Wei & Sara Magalhães & Bin Zhang & Ke-Qing Song & Jie Liu & Wen-Zhu Li & Xing-Ke Yang - 903-911 Nutritional complexity and the structure of bee foraging bouts
by Jacob S. Francis & Felicity Muth & Daniel R. Papaj & Anne S. Leonard - 912-919 Comparing pre- and post-copulatory mate competition using social network analysis in wild crickets
by David N. Fisher & Rolando Rodríguez-Muñoz & Tom Tregenza - 920-931 Do crab spiders perceive Batesian mimicry in hoverflies?
by Rohanna L. Morris & Tom Reader - 932-938 To sing or not to sing: seasonal changes in singing vary with personality in wild great tits
by Marc Naguib & Erica P. van Rooij & Lysanne Snijders & Kees van Oers - 939-945 The effect of temporally variable environmental stimuli and group size on emergence behavior
by Matthew J. Hansen & Lesley J. Morrell & Ashley J.W. Ward - 946-954 Effects of juvenile infection on adult immunity and secondary sexual characters in a wolf spider
by Rachel Gilbert & Richard D. Karp & George W. Uetz
2016, Volume 27, Issue 2
- 363-371 Stress and sexual signaling: a systematic review and meta-analysis
by Fhionna R. Moore & David M. Shuker & Liam Dougherty - 372-372 Sex and stress: a comment on Moore et al
by Anders Pape Møller & Nicola Saino - 373-374 Is stress sexy? A comment on Moore et al
by Christopher J. Leary - 374-374 Stress and sexual traits: why are there no clear relationships? A comment on Moore et al
by Katherine L. Buchanan & Mylene M. Mariette & Ondi L. Crino - 375-375 When limited availability of data meets with a thorough meta-analysis: a comment on Moore et al
by László Zsolt Garamszegi - 375-376 A response to comments on stress and sexual signaling: a systematic review and meta-analysis
by Fhionna R. Moore & David M. Shuker & Liam Dougherty - 377-384 Editor's choice Timing of extrapair fertilizations: within-pair fertilization trade-offs or pair synchrony spillovers?
by Yimen G. Araya-Ajoy & Niels J. Dingemanse & Bart Kempenaers - 385-392 Resource availability and life-history origin affect competitive behavior in territorial disputes
by Travis E. Van Leeuwen & Martin R. Hughes & Jennifer A. Dodd & Colin E. Adams & Neil B. Metcalfe - 393-400 The blessing of having younger nestmates: the case of the Arabian babbler
by Roni Ostreiher & Aviad Heifetz - 401-410 Age-specific foraging performance and reproduction in tool-using wild bottlenose dolphins
by Eric M. Patterson & Ewa Krzyszczyk & Janet Mann - 411-418 Does sensory expansion benefit asexual species? An olfactory discrimination test in Amazon mollies
by Luke Reding & Molly E. Cummings - 419-425 Benefits of kin shoaling in a cichlid fish: familiar and related juveniles show better growth
by Timo Thünken & Saskia Hesse & Theo C.M. Bakker & Sebastian A. Baldauf - 426-433 Niche segregation between immature and adult seabirds: does progressive maturation play a role?
by Letizia Campioni & José Pedro Granadeiro & Paulo Catry - 434-443 Acoustic experience influences male and female pre- and postcopulatory behaviors in a bushcricket
by Darren Rebar & Flavia Barbosa & Michael D. Greenfield - 444-451 Differential genotypic effects of sexual trait size on offspring mating success and viability
by Michal Polak & Kerry V. Fanson & Phillip W. Taylor & Sarsha Yap - 452-461 Effect of competitive cues on reproductive morphology and behavioral plasticity in male fruitflies
by Amanda Bretman & Claudia Fricke & James D. Westmancoat & Tracey Chapman - 462-469 Temperature can shape a cline in polyandry, but only genetic variation can sustain it over time
by Michelle L. Taylor & Tom A.R. Price & Alison Skeats & Nina Wedell - 470-475 Predation shapes the movement of a well-defended species, the North American porcupine, even when nutritionally stressed
by John W. Pokallus & Jonathan N. Pauli - 476-483 Parental care is beneficial for offspring, costly for mothers, and limited by family size in an egg-feeding frog
by Matthew B. Dugas & Caitlin N. Wamelink & Allison M. Killius & Corinne L. Richards-Zawacki - 484-493 The ontogeny of personality traits in the red junglefowl, Gallus gallus
by Anna Favati & Josefina Zidar & Hanne Thorpe & Per Jensen & Hanne Løvlie - 494-500 Maternal condition determines offspring behavior toward family members in the European earwig
by Jos Kramer & Joël Meunier - 501-511 The shifting roles of intrinsic traits in determining seasonal feeding flock composition in seabirds
by Cristóbal Anguita & Alejandro Simeone - 512-519 A lover or a fighter? Opposing sexual selection pressures on men’s vocal pitch and facial hair
by Tamsin K. Saxton & Lauren L. Mackey & Kristofor McCarty & Nick Neave - 520-529 Flexible color learning in an invertebrate predator: Habronattus jumping spiders can learn to prefer or avoid red during foraging
by Lisa A. Taylor & Zarreen Amin & Emily B. Maier & Kevin J. Byrne & Nathan I. Morehouse - 530-537 Ecological context determines the choice between prey of different salinities
by Jorge S. Gutiérrez & Theunis Piersma - 538-544 Herring perform stronger collective evasive reactions when previously exposed to killer whales calls
by Guillaume Rieucau & Lise Doksæter Sivle & Nils Olav Handegard - 545-552 Turbidity weakens selection for assortment in body size in groups
by Helen S. Kimbell & Lesley J. Morrell - 553-559 Intraspecific variation in collective behaviors drives interspecific contests in acorn ants
by James L.L. Lichtenstein & Jonathan N. Pruitt & Andreas P. Modlmeier - 560-566 Dyadic associations and individual sociality in bighorn ewes
by Eric Vander Wal & Audrey Gagné-Delorme & Marco Festa-Bianchet & Fanie Pelletier - 567-574 The effects of wind and fuel stores on stopover departure behavior across a migratory barrier
by Bryant C. Dossman & Greg W. Mitchell & D. Ryan Norris & Philip D. Taylor & Christopher G. Guglielmo & Stephen N. Matthews & Paul G. Rodewald - 575-583 Extreme ecology and mating system: discriminating among direct benefits models in red flour beetles
by Elizabeth M. Droge-Young & John M. Belote & Anjalika Eeswara & Scott Pitnick - 584-591 The role of motor diversity in foraging innovations: a cross-species comparison in urban birds
by Marie C. Diquelou & Andrea S. Griffin & Daniel Sol - 592-600 Polygyny affects paternal care, but not survival, pair stability, and group tenure in a cooperative cichlid
by Arne Jungwirth & Pierpaolo F. Brena & Isabel Keller & Michael Taborsky - 601-607 The sparrow and the hawk: aggressive signaling under risk of predation
by Çağlar Akçay & Allie Clay & S. Elizabeth Campbell & Michael D. Beecher - 608-616 Urban-associated drivers of song variation along a rural–urban gradient
by Desirée L. Narango & Amanda D. Rodewald - 617-627 An experimental conflict of interest between parasites reveals the mechanism of host manipulation
by Nina Hafer & Manfred Milinski - 628-636 Cannibalism, competition, and costly care in the plainfin midshipman fish, Porichthys notatus
by Aneesh P.H. Bose & Grant B. McClelland & Sigal Balshine - 637-644 The town bird and the country bird: problem solving and immunocompetence vary with urbanization
by Jean-Nicolas Audet & Simon Ducatez & Louis Lefebvre - 645-651 "Parasite-induced aposematism" protects entomopathogenic nematode parasites against invertebrate enemies
by Rebecca S. Jones & Andy Fenton & Michael P. Speed - 652-659 Coordinated parental provisioning is related to feeding rate and reproductive success in a songbird
by Kat Bebbington & Ben J. Hatchwell - 660-668 Internest food sharing within wood ant colonies: resource redistribution behavior in a complex system
by Samuel Ellis & Elva J.H. Robinson - 669-676 Vocal responses to noise reveal the presence of the Lombard effect in a frog
by W. Halfwerk & A.M. Lea & M.A. Guerra & R.A. Page & M.J. Ryan - 677-684 Birds use eggshell UV reflectance when recognizing non-mimetic parasitic eggs
by Michal Šulc & Petr Procházka & Miroslav Capek & Marcel Honza
2016, Volume 27, Issue 1
- 1-1 Mandatory data archiving in Behavioral Ecology
by Leigh W. Simmons - 2-13 Is there an evolutionary trade-off between quality signaling and social recognition?
by Michael J. Sheehan & Thore J. Bergman - 14-15 Is information from both quality signaling and social recognition really redundant? A comment on Sheehan and Bergman
by Amanda R. Ridley & David J. Humphries & Elizabeth M. Wiley - 15-16 Quality signals may be common in species with social recognition: a comment on Sheehan and Bergman
by James Dale - 16-17 The evolution of signaling complexity: a comment on Sheehan and Bergman
by Susanne Shultz & Andrew S. Gersick - 17-18 Understanding antagonism: a comment on Sheehan and Bergman
by Louise Barrett & S. Peter Henzi - 18-19 A quality signaling–recognition trade-off at the level of the type of interaction not species: a response to comments on Sheehan and Bergman
by Michael J. Sheehan & Thore J. Bergman - 20-28 Editor's choice The effects of social network position on the survival of wild Barbary macaques, Macaca sylvanus
by Julia Lehmann & Bonaventura Majolo & Richard McFarland - 29-35 Haven for the night: sleeping site selection in a wild primate
by A. Catherine Markham & Susan C. Alberts & Jeanne Altmann - 36-44 Should receivers follow multiple signal components? An economic perspective
by Tricia L. Rubi & David W. Stephens - 45-54 Speed and maneuverability jointly determine escape success: exploring the functional bases of escape performance using simulated games
by Christofer J. Clemente & Robbie S. Wilson - 55-61 Female guppies can recognize kin but only avoid incest when previously mated
by Mitchel J. Daniel & F. Helen Rodd - 62-67 It’s a trap: sampling bias due to animal personality is not always inevitable
by Marcus Michelangeli & Bob B.M. Wong & David G. Chapple - 68-74 Who cares? Experimental attention biases provide new insights into a mammalian sexual signal
by Constance Dubuc & William L. Allen & Julie Cascio & D. Susie Lee & Dario Maestripieri & Megan Petersdorf & Sandra Winters & James P. Higham - 75-82 Movement decisions in natural catastrophes: how a flying scavenger deals with a volcanic eruption
by Pablo A.E. Alarcón & Sergio A. Lambertucci & José A. Donázar & Fernando Hiraldo & José A. Sánchez-Zapata & Guillermo Blanco & Juan M. Morales - 83-92 The swaying behavior of Extatosoma tiaratum: motion camouflage in a stick insect?
by Xue Bian & Mark A. Elgar & Richard A. Peters - 93-100 Multiple mating predicts intensity but not mechanism of kin recognition
by Timothy J.A. Hain & Shawn R. Garner & Indar W. Ramnarine & Bryan D. Neff - 101-108 Wind farm noise suppresses territorial defense behavior in a songbird
by Mieke C. Zwart & Jonathon C. Dunn & Philip J.K. McGowan & Mark J. Whittingham - 109-117 Reproduction and immunity trade-offs constrain mating signals and nuptial gift size in a bushcricket
by Flavia Barbosa & Darren Rebar & Michael D. Greenfield - 118-125 A proactive–reactive syndrome affects group success in an ant species
by Olivier Blight & Gisela Albet Díaz-Mariblanca & Xim Cerdá & Raphaël Boulay - 126-133 Exploratory behavior of dispersers within a metapopulation of sockeye salmon
by Daniel A. Peterson & Ray Hilborn & Lorenz Hauser - 134-140 Favored parent–offspring trait combinations? On the interplay of parental and offspring traits
by Carsten Lucass & Mareike Stöwe & Marcel Eens & Wendt Müller - 141-147 Multicomponent deceptive signals reduce the speed at which predators learn that prey are profitable
by John Skelhorn & Grace G. Holmes & Thomas J. Hossie & Thomas N. Sherratt - 148-157 Patterns of parasitism in the cooperatively breeding meerkat: a cost of dominance for females
by Kendra N. Smyth & Christine M. Drea - 158-165 Local ecology influences reproductive timing in Northern Ireland independently of individual wealth
by Caroline Uggla & Ruth Mace - 166-174 Short-term and delayed effects of mother death on calf mortality in Asian elephants
by Mirkka Lahdenperä & Khyne U. Mar & Virpi Lummaa - 175-184 Pre-existing biases for swords in mollies (Poecilia)
by Amber M. Makowicz & Jessie C. Tanner & Eric Dumas & Cameron D. Siler & Ingo Schlupp - 185-195 Function of copulatory plugs in house mice: mating behavior and paternity outcomes of rival males
by Andreas Sutter & Leigh W. Simmons & Anna K. Lindholm & Renée C. Firman - 196-203 Nest predation risk, but not demography, drives dynamics of conspecific brood parasitism
by Hannu Pöysä & Antti Paasivaara - 204-210 Nest environment modulates begging behavior of a generalist brood parasite
by Diego T. Tuero & Ros Gloag & Juan C. Reboreda - 211-218 No phenotypic signature of acoustic competition in songs of a tropical cricket assemblage
by Arne K.D. Schmidt & Klaus Riede & Heiner Römer - 219-227 Dietary protein selection in a free-ranging urban population of common myna birds
by Gabriel E. Machovsky-Capuska & Alistair M. Senior & Simon P. Zantis & Katherine Barna & Aaron J. Cowieson & Sarika Pandya & Christophe Pavard & Michael Shiels & David Raubenheimer - 228-236 An experimental test of duet function in a fairy-wren (Malurus) with moderate cuckoldry rates
by Jenélle Dowling & Michael S. Webster - 237-244 Context-dependent effects of complex environments on behavioral plasticity
by Zachary R. Stahlschmidt & Lindsey M. Holcomb & Rachel L. Luoma - 245-251 Flesh flies regulate the consumption of 3 macronutrients to maximize lifespan and egg production
by Jesse Hawley & Stephen J. Simpson & Shawn M. Wilder - 252-261 Social experience affects female mate preferences for a visual trait in a wolf spider
by Brent Stoffer & George W. Uetz - 262-270 UV color determines the issue of conflicts but does not covary with individual quality in a lizard
by Mélissa Martin & Sandrine Meylan & Claudy Haussy & Beatriz Decencière & Samuel Perret & Jean-François Le Galliard - 271-278 Geographic and life-history variation in ant queen colony founding correlates with brain amine levels
by Mario L. Muscedere & Sara Helms Cahan & Ken R. Helms & James F.A. Traniello - 279-286 Yellow warbler defenses are retained in the absence of brood parasitism but enhanced by experience with cowbirds
by Michael J. Kuehn & Brian D. Peer & Robert A. McCleery & Stephen I. Rothstein - 287-294 Evolution of natal and breeding dispersal: when is a territory an asset worth protecting?
by Anna M.F. Harts & Kim Jaatinen & Hanna Kokko - 295-303 Social pairing of Seychelles warblers under reduced constraints: MHC, neutral heterozygosity, and age
by David J. Wright & Lyanne Brouwer & Maria-Elena Mannarelli & Terry Burke & Jan Komdeur & David S. Richardson - 304-311 Ant recognition cue diversity is higher in the presence of slavemaker ants
by Evelien Jongepier & Susanne Foitzik - 312-320 Postcopulatory consequences of female mate choice in a fish with alternative reproductive tactics
by John L. Fitzpatrick & David J.D. Earn & Carol Bucking & Paul M. Craig & Sunita Nadella & Chris M. Wood & Sigal Balshine - 321-331 Proximate causes of avian protandry differ between subspecies with contrasting migration challenges
by Heiko Schmaljohann & Christoph Meier & Debora Arlt & Franz Bairlein & Herman van Oosten & Yolanda E. Morbey & Susanne Åkesson & Martin Buchmann & Nikita Chernetsov & Robert Desaever & John Elliott & Magnus Hellström & Felix Liechti & Aïda López & John Middleton & Ulf Ottosson & Tomas Pärt & Fernando Spina & Cas Eikenaar - 332-340 Not so sexy in the city: urban birds adjust songs to noise but compromise vocal performance
by David A. Luther & Jennifer Phillips & Elizabeth P. Derryberry - 341-351 Plasticity in social communication and its implications for the colonization of novel habitats
by Terry J. Ord & Grace K. Charles & Meredith Palmer & Judy A. Stamps - 352-362 Individual parameters shape foraging activity in breeding king penguins
by Maryline Le Vaillant & Yan Ropert-Coudert & Yvon Le Maho & Céline Le Bohec
2015, Volume 26, Issue 6
- 1447-1459 Heritability and the evolution of cognitive traits
by R. Croston & C.L. Branch & D.Y. Kozlovsky & R. Dukas & V.V. Pravosudov - 1460-1461 In search of the Darwinian Holy Trinity in cognitive evolution: a comment on Croston et al
by A. Thornton & A.J. Wilson - 1461-1462 Interpreting measurements of heritability: a comment on Croston et al
by Tom V. Smulders - 1462-1462 More data required: a comment on Croston et al
by Susan D. Healy - 1463-1464 The importance of heritability estimates for understanding the evolution of cognition: a response to comments on Croston etal
by R. Croston & C.L. Branch & D.Y. Kozlovsky & R. Dukas & V.V. Pravosudov - 1465-1469 Using bacteria to study consistent variation in individual behavior
by Gunnar De Winter & James P. Stratford & Ben B. Chapman - 1470-1475 Editor's choice Human perception of fighting ability: facial cues predict winners and losers in mixed martial arts fights
by Anthony C. Little & Vít Třebický & Jan Havlíček & S. Craig Roberts & Karel Kleisner - 1476-1485 Costs of social dispersal in a polygynous mammal
by Lucie Debeffe & Emmanuelle Richard & Sarah A. Medill & Jordan N. Weisgerber & Philip D. McLoughlin - 1486-1494 Adjustment of costly extra-group paternity according to inbreeding risk in a cooperative mammal
by Hazel J. Nichols & Michael A. Cant & Jennifer L. Sanderson - 1495-1501 Saami reindeer herders cooperate with social group members and genetic kin
by Matthew G. Thomas & Marius Warg Næss & Bård-Jørgen Bårdsen & Ruth Mace - 1502-1511 Diet affects ejaculate traits in a lizard with condition-dependent fertilization success
by Ariel F. Kahrl & Robert M. Cox - 1512-1519 Egg-spot pattern and body size asymmetries influence male aggression in haplochromine cichlid fishes
by Anya Theis & Tania Bosia & Tobias Roth & Walter Salzburger & Bernd Egger - 1520-1527 Individual flexibility in nocturnal activity reduces risk of road mortality for an urban carnivore
by Maureen H. Murray & Colleen Cassady St. Clair - 1528-1536 The aggressive personality of an introduced fish affects foraging behavior in a polymorphic newt
by Laurane Winandy & Mathieu Denoël - 1537-1547 Causes and consequences of variation in female mate search investment in a lekking bird
by E.H. DuVal & J.A. Kapoor - 1548-1557 Get off my lawn: increased aggression in urban song sparrows is related to resource availability
by Sarah L. Foltz & Allen E. Ross & Brenton T. Laing & Ryan P. Rock & Kathryn E. Battle & Ignacio T. Moore - 1558-1568 Context dependence of risk effects: wolves and tree logs create patches of fear in an old-growth forest
by Dries P.J. Kuijper & Jakub W. Bubnicki & Marcin Churski & Bjorn Mols & Pim van Hooft - 1569-1576 Variation in nest relocation of harvester ants is affected by population density and food abundance
by Noa Pinter-Wollman & Mark J.F. Brown - 1577-1586 Integrating network analysis, sensor tags, and observation to understand shark ecology and behavior
by Alexander D.M. Wilson & Jacob W. Brownscombe & Jens Krause & Stefan Krause & Lee F.G. Gutowsky & Edward J. Brooks & Steven J. Cooke - 1587-1596 Disentangling the effect of parental care, food supply, and offspring decisions on the duration of the postfledging period
by Roberto Muriel & Miguel Ferrer & Javier Balbontín & Laura Cabrera & Cecilia P. Calabuig
2015, Volume 26, Issue 5
- 1-3 The chimeric embryo hypothesis as a mechanism of avian sex ratio manipulation? Comment on Tagirov and Rutkowska
by Eszter Szász & Balázs Rosivall - 4-5 The chimeric embryo hypothesis as a mechanism of avian sex ratio manipulation: a reply to Szász and Rosivall
by Makhsud Tagirov - 1249-1260 The spandrels of Santa Barbara? A new perspective on the peri-ovulation paradigm
by Jan Havliček & Kelly D. Cobey & Louise Barrett & Kateřina Klapilová & S. Craig Roberts - 1261-1261 Human sexuality and the menstrual cycle: comment on Havliček et al
by Alan Dixson - 1261-1262 The many sides of the periovulational coin: comment on Havliček et al
by Janek S. Lobmaier & Wilhelm K. Klatt & Vanda Lory & Fabian Probst - 1262-1263 Are within-cycle variations in women’s sexual interests mere by-products? A comment on Havliček et al
by Steven W. Gangestad & Nicholas M. Grebe - 1263-1264 A new (or truly parsimonious) perspective? A comment on Havliček et al
by Martie G. Haselton - 1264-1265 A between-women account of cycle-phase shifts is probably wrong: comment on Havliček et al
by James R. Roney & Aaron W. Lukaszewski & Zachary L. Simmons & Adar B. Eisenbruch & Rachel L. Grillot - 1265-1267 Greater precision, not parsimony, is the key to testing the peri-ovulation spandrel hypothesis: a response to comments on Havliček et al. 2015
by Jan Havliček & Kelly D. Cobey & Louise Barrett & Kateřina Klapilová & S. Craig Roberts - 1268-1273 Item Response Trees: a recommended method for analyzing categorical data in behavioral studies
by Andrés López-Sepulcre & Sebastiano De Bona & Janne K. Valkonen & Kate D.L. Umbers & Johanna Mappes - 1274-1284 Editor's choice Lab rearing environment perturbs social traits: a case study with Polistes wasps
by Jennifer M. Jandt & Jessica L. Thomson & Amy C. Geffre & Amy L. Toth - 1285-1291 Temporally fluctuating selection on a personality trait in a wild rodent population
by Christie Le Cœur & Martin Thibault & Benoît Pisanu & Sophie Thibault & Jean-Louis Chapuis & Emmanuelle Baudry - 1292-1302 Malaria parasites, immune challenge, MHC variability, and predator avoidance in a passerine bird
by László Zsolt Garamszegi & Magdalena Zagalska-Neubauer & David Canal & Gábor Markó & Eszter Szász & Sándor Zsebők & Eszter Szöllősi & Gábor Herczeg & János Török - 1303-1313 The ideal free antelope: foraging dispersions
by Jack W. Bradbury & Sandra L. Vehrencamp & Kenneth E. Clifton - 1314-1325 Personality affects mate choice: bolder males show stronger audience effects under high competition
by David Bierbach & Carolin Sommer-Trembo & Janina Hanisch & Max Wolf & Martin Plath - 1326-1334 Thermal stress affects patch time allocation by preventing forgetting in a parasitoid wasp
by Paul K. Abram & Antonino Cusumano & Ezio Peri & Jacques Brodeur & Guy Boivin & Stefano Colazza - 1335-1344 The value of information in floral cues: bumblebee learning of floral size cues
by Carla J. Essenberg & Rebekah A. Easter & Rachel A. Simmons & Daniel R. Papaj - 1345-1351 Temporal shift in activity patterns of Himalayan marmots in relation to pastoralism
by Buddi S. Poudel & Peter G. Spooner & Alison Matthews - 1352-1360 Group composition effects on aggressive interpack interactions of gray wolves in Yellowstone National Park
by Kira A. Cassidy & Daniel R. MacNulty & Daniel R. Stahler & Douglas W. Smith & L. David Mech - 1361-1370 Different reactions to aposematic prey in 2 geographically distant populations of great tits
by Alice Exnerová & Dana Ježová & Pavel Štys & Lucia Doktorovová & Bibiana Rojas & Johanna Mappes - 1371-1378 Smart and safe? Antipredator behavior and breeding success are related to head size in a wild bird
by Markus Öst & Kim Jaatinen - 1379-1388 Attracting songbirds with conspecific playback: a community approach
by Leanna N. DeJong & Samuel D. Cowell & Thuy Nhi N. Nguyen & Darren S. Proppe - 1389-1394 Hiding in plain sight: a study on camouflage and habitat selection in a slow-moving desert herbivore
by Melia G. Nafus & Jennifer M. Germano & Jeanette A. Perry & Brian D. Todd & Allyson Walsh & Ronald R. Swaisgood - 1395-1403 Is a proactive mum a good mum? A mother’s coping style influences early fawn survival in roe deer
by Chloé Monestier & Nicolas Morellet & Jean-Michel Gaillard & Bruno Cargnelutti & Cécile Vanpé & A.J. Mark Hewison - 1404-1413 Male extraterritorial behavior predicts extrapair paternity pattern in blue tits, Cyanistes caeruleus
by Lotte Schlicht & Mihai Valcu & Bart Kempenaers - 1414-1422 Opposing effects of group size on reproduction and survival in African wild dogs
by Scott Creel & Nancy Marusha Creel - 1423-1431 Do the benefits of polyandry scale with outbreeding?
by Emily R. Burdfield-Steel & Sam Auty & David M. Shuker - 1432-1446 Differences in conspicuousness between alternative color morphs in a polychromatic lizard
by Guillem Pérez i de Lanuza & Enrique Font
2015, Volume 26, Issue 4
- 959-968 Genetic similarity between mates predicts extrapair paternity—a meta-analysis of bird studies
by Aneta Arct & Szymon M. Drobniak & Mariusz Cichoń - 969-970 What can we really say about relatedness and extrapair paternity: a comment on Arct et al
by Jane M. Reid - 970-971 Genetic similarity is broadly associated with genetic polyandry in birds: a comment on Arct et al
by Simon C. Griffith - 971-972 Sugar-free extrapair mating: a comment on Arct et al
by Shinichi Nakagawa & Julia Schroeder & Terry Burke - 972-973 Caution is needed when 90% of all possible estimates remain unpublished: a comment on Arct et al
by Wolfgang Forstmeier - 973-974 Extrapair paternity and genetic similarity—we are not quite there yet: a response to comments on Arct et al
by Szymon M. Drobniak & Aneta Arct & Mariusz Cichoń