Content
2014, Volume 25, Issue 5
- 1097-1104 Condition-dependent mate assessment and choice by peahens: implications for sexual selection
by Roslyn Dakin & Robert Montgomerie - 1105-1114 Parasite- and predator-induced maternal effects in the great tit (Parus major)
by Alessandra Basso & Michael Coslovsky & Heinz Richner - 1115-1122 Context-dependent relationship between a composite measure of men’s mate value and ejaculate quality
by Samantha Leivers & Gillian Rhodes & Leigh W. Simmons - 1123-1130 Time scales of associating food and odor by predator communities in the field
by Arne Janssen & Juliana Oliveira Fonseca & Felipe Colares & Lidiane Silva & Aline R.P. Pedrosa & Eraldo R. Lima & Michiel van Wijk & Angelo Pallini & Cleber M. Oliveira & Maurice W. Sabelis & Izabela Lesna - 1131-1135 The cost of teaching embryos in superb fairy-wrens
by Sonia Kleindorfer & Herbert Hoi & Christine Evans & Katharina Mahr & Jeremy Robertson & Mark E. Hauber & Diane Colombelli-Négrel - 1136-1147 The flush early and avoid the rush hypothesis holds after accounting for spontaneous behavior
by Dana M. Williams & Diogo S.M. Samia & William E. Cooper & Daniel T. Blumstein - 1148-1156 Shaping the antipredator strategy: flexibility, consistency, and behavioral correlations under varying predation threat
by Morgan David & Marion Salignon & Marie-Jeanne Perrot-Minnot - 1157-1163 Sex-biased juvenile dispersal is adaptive but does not create genetic structure in island lizards
by Ryan Calsbeek & M.C. Duryea & Elizabeth Parker & Robert M. Cox - 1164-1172 Social and ecological factors influencing offspring survival in wild macaques
by Daphne Kerhoas & Dyah Perwitasari-Farajallah & Muhammad Agil & Anja Widdig & Antje Engelhardt - 1173-1182 Conditional helping and evolutionary transitions to eusociality and cooperative breeding
by Luke Holman - 1183-1191 Resource redistribution in polydomous ant nest networks: local or global?
by Samuel Ellis & Daniel W. Franks & Elva J.H. Robinson - 1192-1198 Feather bacterial load affects plumage condition, iridescent color, and investment in preening in pigeons
by Sarah Leclaire & Pauline Pierret & Marion Chatelain & Julien Gasparini - 1199-1204 Human observers impact habituated samango monkeys’ perceived landscape of fear
by Katarzyna Nowak & Aliza le Roux & Shane A. Richards & Ciska P.J. Scheijen & Russell A. Hill - 1205-1211 The effects of familiarity and mating experience on mate choice in mosquitofish, Gambusia holbrooki
by Regina Vega-Trejo & Rose E. O’Dea & Michael D. Jennions & Megan L. Head - 1212-1222 Maternal lineages best explain the associations of a semisocial marsupial
by Michaela D.J. Blyton & David B. Lindenmayer & Sam C. Banks - 1223-1232 Exaggerated rostra as weapons and the competitive assessment strategy of male giraffe weevils
by Christina J. Painting & Gregory I. Holwell - 1233-1239 Frugivorous bats evaluate the quality of social information when choosing novel foods
by M. Teague O’Mara & Dina K.N. Dechmann & Rachel A. Page - 1240-1247 Roosting behavior and group decision making in 2 syntopic bat species with fission–fusion societies
by Daniela Fleischmann & Gerald Kerth - 1248-1255 Melanic coloration differentially predicts transfer of immune factors to eggs with daughters or sons
by Nicola Saino & Maria Romano & Diego Rubolini & Manuela Caprioli & Alessandra Costanzo & Luca Canova & Anders Pape Møller - 1256-1267 Female discrimination against heterospecific mates does not depend on mating habitat
by Alycia C.R. Lackey & Janette W. Boughman - 1268-1275 Optimal hunting conditions drive circalunar behavior of a diurnal carnivore
by Femke Broekhuis & Steffen Grünewälder & John W. McNutt & David W. Macdonald
2014, Volume 25, Issue 4
- 675-679 Winning, losing, and reaching out
by Lee Alan Dugatkin & Hudson Kern Reeve - 680-684 The past and the future of Behavioral Ecology
by Manfred Milinski - 685-699 Male-to-female testosterone ratios, dimorphism, and life history—what does it really tell us?
by Wolfgang Goymann & John C. Wingfield - 700-701 Female peak testosterone levels in birds tell an evolutionary story: a comment on Goymann and Wingfield
by László Zsolt Garamszegi - 701-701 Female androgen levels—what are the selective pressures in birds? A comment on Goymann and Wingfield
by Katherine L. Buchanan & Kerry V. Fanson - 702-702 Male and female testosterone—is one sex made in the image of the other? A comment on Goymann and Wingfield
by Ellen D. Ketterson - 702-704 In search for a theory of testosterone in female birds: a comment on Goymann and Wingfield
by Ton G.G. Groothuis & Berber de Jong & Martina Müller - 704-705 Correlated evolution of female and male testosterone—internal constraints or external determinants? A response to comments on Goymann and Wingfield
by Wolfgang Goymann & John C. Wingfield - 706-715 Editor's choice Dominant aggression as a deterrent signal in paper wasps
by Faye J. Thompson & Lynda Donaldson & Rufus A. Johnstone & Jeremy Field & Michael A. Cant - 716-722 Can males detect the strength of sperm competition and presence of genital plugs during mate choice?
by Stefanie M. Zimmer & Jutta M. Schneider & Marie E. Herberstein - 723-733 Partners’ personality types and mate preferences: predation risk matters
by Aimeric Teyssier & Elvire Bestion & Murielle Richard & Julien Cote - 734-743 Behavioral drivers of communal roosting in a songbird: a combined theoretical and empirical approach
by Andrew J. Laughlin & Daniel R. Sheldon & David W. Winkler & Caz M. Taylor - 744-753 Immigration and dispersal are key determinants of cultural diversity in a songbird population
by Annette L. Fayet & Joseph A. Tobias & Rogier E. Hintzen & Nathalie Seddon - 754-761 Maternal care provides antifungal protection to eggs in the European earwig
by Stefan Boos & Joël Meunier & Samuel Pichon & Mathias Kölliker - 762-772 Evolution of parental roles in provisioning birds: diet determines role asymmetry in raptors
by Geir A. Sonerud & Ronny Steen & Vidar Selås & Ole M. Aanonsen & Gunn-Henny Aasen & Kristine L. Fagerland & Annette Fosså & Lena Kristiansen & Line M. Løw & Mads E. Rønning & Sarah K. Skouen & Espen Asakskogen & Hilde M. Johansen & Jon T. Johnsen & Lise I. Karlsen & Gunnar C. Nyhus & Line T. Røed & Kristin Skar & Bjørn-Arild Sveen & Reidar Tveiten & Tore Slagsvold - 773-784 Effects of predation risk on group size, vigilance, and foraging behavior in an African ungulate community
by Scott Creel & Paul Schuette & David Christianson - 785-793 Mismatched begging displays between foreign and host offspring reduce brood parasite fitness
by James W. Rivers & Melissa A. Blundell & Stephen I. Rothstein - 794-801 Socioecology, but not cognition, predicts male coalitions across primates
by Annie Bissonnette & Mathias Franz & Oliver Schülke & Julia Ostner - 802-812 Residual correlations, and not individual properties, determine a nest defense boldness syndrome
by Jon E. Brommer & Patrik Karell & Kari Ahola & Teuvo Karstinen - 813-818 Prior experience affects allocation to current reproduction in a burying beetle
by Eric J. Billman & J. Curtis Creighton & Mark C. Belk - 819-826 Evidence of the Lombard effect in fishes
by Daniel E. Holt & Carol E. Johnston - 827-833 Sex ratio does not influence sex change despite its effect on reproductive success
by Sara Kappus & Peggy Fong - 834-842 Wealth modifies relationships between kin and women’s fertility in high-income countries
by Susan B. Schaffnit & Rebecca Sear - 843-851 Delayed dispersal in western bluebirds: teasing apart the importance of resources and parents
by Janis L. Dickinson & Elise D. Ferree & Caitlin A. Stern & Rose Swift & Benjamin Zuckerberg - 852-861 Factors affecting low resident male siring success in one-male groups of blue monkeys
by Su-Jen Roberts & Eleni Nikitopoulos & Marina Cords - 862-870 Mean ecological conditions modulate the effects of group living and communal rearing on offspring production and survival
by Luis A. Ebensperger & Álvaro Villegas & Sebastian Abades & Loren D. Hayes - 871-877 Effect of prey personality depends on predator species
by Chelsea A. Blake & Caitlin R. Gabor - 878-889 Variance in male lifetime reproductive success and estimation of the degree of polygyny in a primate
by Constance Dubuc & Angelina Ruiz-Lambides & Anja Widdig - 890-900 Host escape behavior and blood parasite infections in birds
by L. García-Longoria & L. Z. Garamszegi & A. P. Møller - 901-908 Clonal variation in aggregation and defensive behavior in pea aphids
by Frédéric B. Muratori & Angéla Rouyar & Thierry Hance - 909-915 Singing in Africa: no evidence for a long supposed function of winter song in a migratory songbird
by Marjorie C. Sorensen - 916-923 Increasing sexual ornamentation during a biological invasion
by Gonçalo C. Cardoso & Helena R. Batalha & Sandra Reis & Ricardo J. Lopes - 924-927 Energetic cost of behavioral thermoregulation in turtle embryos
by Bo Zhao & Ping Ding & Wen Zhang - 928-932 A recent predatory encounter influences male courtship in a desert-dwelling fish
by Marcus Michelangeli & Bob B. M. Wong - 933-944 Effect of flower visual angle on flower constancy: a test of the search image hypothesis
by Hiroshi S. Ishii & Hikaru Masuda - 945-950 Context-dependent effects of carotenoid supplementation on reproduction in zebra finches
by Mirre J.P. Simons & Michael Briga & Bas Leenknegt & Simon Verhulst - 951-959 The effect of ecological context and relatedness on larval cannibalism in a fungus-associated beetle
by Corlett W. Wood & Hannah E. Marti & Edmund D. Brodie III - 960-966 Direction of approach by predators and flight initiation distance of urban and rural populations of birds
by Anders Pape Møller & Piotr Tryjanowski - 967-974 The opportunity for sampling: the ecological context of female mate choice
by Rittik Deb & Rohini Balakrishnan - 975-983 Caterpillar hair as a physical barrier against invertebrate predators
by Shinji Sugiura & Kazuo Yamazaki - 984-988 Vocal fundamental and formant frequencies are honest signals of threat potential in peripubertal males
by Carolyn R. Hodges-Simeon & Michael Gurven & David A. Puts & Steven J.C. Gaulin - 989-995 A test of the sexy-sperm and good-sperm hypotheses for the evolution of polyandry
by Kathryn B. McNamara & Emile van Lieshout & Leigh W. Simmons - 996-1004 Bacterial communities in meerkat anal scent secretions vary with host sex, age, and group membership
by Sarah Leclaire & Johanna F. Nielsen & Christine M. Drea - 1005-1014 Tests of the kin selection model of mate choice and inbreeding avoidance in satin bowerbirds
by Sheila M. Reynolds & J. Albert C. Uy & Gail L. Patricelli & Seth W. Coleman & Michael J. Braun & Gerald Borgia - 1015-1016 Complex behavior can also emerge from simple linear interactions: comment on Bradbury and Vehrencamp
by Gabriel Ramos-Fernández & Denis Boyer - 1016-1017 Complex behavior can also emerge from simple linear interactions. A reply to Ramos-Fernández and Boyer (2014)
by Jack W. Bradbury & Sandra Vehrencamp
2014, Volume 25, Issue 3
- 435-442 Complexity and behavioral ecology
by Jack W. Bradbury & Sandra L. Vehrencamp - 443-449 Human behavioral ecology and its evil twin
by Ruth Mace - 450-463 Animal visual illusion and confusion: the importance of a perceptual perspective
by Laura A. Kelley & Jennifer L. Kelley - 464-465 Confusion and illusion: understanding visual traits and behavior. A comment on Kelley and Kelley
by Martin Stevens - 465-465 Identifying animal illusions requires neuronal and cognitive approaches: comment on Kelley and Kelley
by Marc Théry - 466-466 Alluring illusions: a comment on Kelley and Kelley
by Sami Merilaita - 466-467 When seeing is deceiving: a comment on Kelley and Kelley
by Michael J. Ryan - 467-468 Exploring the perceptual canvas of signal evolution: comment on Kelley and Kelley
by Darrell J. Kemp & Thomas E. White - 468-469 Perceptual biases and animal illusions: a response to comments on Kelley and Kelley
by Laura A. Kelley & Jennifer L. Kelley - 470-476 Editor's choice Countering counteradaptations: males hijack control of female kicking behavior
by Carly J. Wilson & Joseph L. Tomkins - 477-486 Spatial ecology of perceived predation risk and vigilance behavior in white-faced capuchins
by Fernando A. Campos & Linda M. Fedigan - 487-495 An arms race between producers and scroungers can drive the evolution of social cognition
by Michal Arbilly & Daniel B. Weissman & Marcus W. Feldman & Uri Grodzinski - 496-503 Signals of need and quality: Atlantic puffin chicks can beg and boast
by Megan E. Rector & Carolyn J. Walsh & Amy-Lee Kouwenberg & Michelle G. Fitzsimmons & Anne E. Storey - 504-508 Interspecific analysis of vehicle avoidance behavior in birds
by Arild Husby & Magne Husby - 509-519 Increased perception of predation risk to adults and offspring alters avian reproductive strategy and performance
by Fangyuan Hua & Kathryn E. Sieving & Robert J. Fletcher & Chloe A. Wright - 520-530 Behavioral strategies and signaling in interspecific aggressive interactions in gray tree frogs
by Michael S. Reichert & H. Carl Gerhardt - 531-537 Habitat geometry does not affect levels of extrapair paternity in an extremely unfaithful fairy-wren
by Lyanne Brouwer & Martijn van de Pol & Andrew Cockburn - 538-548 A songbird mimics different heterospecific alarm calls in response to different types of threat
by Branislav Igic & Robert D. Magrath - 549-552 Mate choosiness in young male fruit flies
by Reuven Dukas & Carling M. Baxter - 553-564 Host-shift effects on mating behavior and incipient pre-mating isolation in seed beetle
by Biljana Stojković & Uroš Savković & Mirko Đorđević & Nikola Tucić - 565-573 Jackdaw nestlings can discriminate between conspecific calls but do not beg specifically to their parents
by Lies Zandberg & Jolle W. Jolles & Neeltje J. Boogert & Alex Thornton - 574-581 Mixed-species associations can arise without heterospecific attraction
by Damien R. Farine & Charles P. Downing & Philip A. Downing - 582-590 Experimental evidence of impacts of an invasive parakeet on foraging behavior of native birds
by Hannah L. Peck & Henrietta E. Pringle & Harry H. Marshall & Ian P.F. Owens & Alexa M. Lord - 591-603 Playback tests and studies of animal contest dynamics: concepts and an example in the gray tree frog
by Michael S. Reichert - 604-611 Wary invaders and clever natives: sympatric house geckos show disparate responses to predator scent
by Adam Cisterne & Eric P. Vanderduys & David A. Pike & Lin Schwarzkopf - 612-626 Female preference for male color is necessary and sufficient for assortative mating in 2 cichlid sister species
by Oliver M. Selz & Michele E.R. Pierotti & Martine E. Maan & Corinne Schmid & Ole Seehausen - 627-632 Aphids link different sensory modalities to accurately interpret ambiguous cues
by Matan Ben-Ari & Moshe Inbar - 633-640 Maternal and additive genetic effects contribute to variation in offspring traits in a lizard
by Daniel W.A. Noble & S. Eryn McFarlane & J. Scott Keogh & Martin J. Whiting - 641-649 Urban and colorful male house finches are less aggressive
by Masaru Hasegawa & Russell A. Ligon & Mathieu Giraudeau & Mamoru Watanabe & Kevin J. McGraw - 650-659 No relationship between female emergence time from the roosting place and extrapair paternity
by Lotte Schlicht & Mihai Valcu & Peter Loës & Alexander Girg & Bart Kempenaers - 660-667 Sequential male mate choice under sperm competition risk
by Steven A. Ramm & Paula Stockley - 668-674 Cheating workers with large activated ovaries avoid risky foraging
by Katherine M. Roth & Madeleine Beekman & Michael H. Allsopp & Frances Goudie & Theresa C. Wossler & Benjamin P. Oldroyd
2014, Volume 25, Issue 2
- 239-241 Reflections
by Tim R. Birkhead - 242-255 The dynamics of animal social networks: analytical, conceptual, and theoretical advances
by Noa Pinter-Wollman & Elizabeth A. Hobson & Jennifer E. Smith & Andrew J. Edelman & Daizaburo Shizuka & Shermin de Silva & James S. Waters & Steven D. Prager & Takao Sasaki & George Wittemyer & Jennifer Fewell & David B. McDonald - 256-257 Everybody has a social life. Can social network analysis help us understand why not just how? Comment on Pinter-Wollman et al
by Nick J. Royle - 257-258 The behavioral ecologist’s essential social networks cookbook—comment on Pinter-Wollman et al
by Luke Rendell & Shane Gero - 258-259 Dynamic feedbacks on dynamic networks: on the importance of considering real-time rewiring—comment on Pinter-Wollman et al
by Andrew Sih & Tina W. Wey - 259-260 We must consider dynamic changes in behavior in social networks and conduct manipulations: comment on Pinter-Wollman et al
by Sean A. Rands - 260-261 Response to comments on the dynamics of network dynamics
by Noa Pinter-Wollman & Elizabeth A. Hobson & Jennifer E. Smith & Andrew J. Edelman & Daizaburo Shizuka & Shermin de Silva & James S. Waters & Steven D. Prager & Takao Sasaki & George Wittemyer & Jennifer Fewell & David B. McDonald - 262-270 Editor's choice The biparental care hypothesis for the evolution of monogamy: experimental evidence in an amphibian
by James Tumulty & Victor Morales & Kyle Summers - 271-275 Fiddlers on the roof: elevation muddles mate choice in fiddler crabs
by Luke Holman & Andrew T. Kahn & Patricia R.Y. Backwell - 276-287 Age-dependent relationships between multiple sexual pigments and condition in males and females
by Andrea S. Grunst & John T. Rotenberry & Melissa L. Grunst - 288-299 Inbreeding depression of mating behavior and its reproductive consequences in a freshwater snail
by Tim Janicke & Nikolas Vellnow & Thomas Lamy & Elodie Chapuis & Patrice David - 300-305 Leachates from an invasive shrub causes risk-prone behavior in a larval amphibian
by Caleb R. Hickman & James I. Watling - 306-312 Predator exposure leads to a short-term reversal in female mate preferences in the green swordtail, Xiphophorus helleri
by Natalie Pilakouta & Suzanne H. Alonzo - 313-319 When males are more inclined to stay at home: insights into the partial migration of a pelagic seabird provided by geolocators and isotopes
by Cristóbal Pérez & José Pedro Granadeiro & Maria P. Dias & Hany Alonso & Paulo Catry - 320-327 Size and competitive mating success in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae
by Carl Smith & Andrew Pomiankowski & Duncan Greig - 328-334 Sunbirds increase foraging success by using color as a cue for nectar quality
by Maxine Whitfield & Angela Köhler & Susan W. Nicolson - 335-343 Social parasitism: emergence of the cuckoo strategy between pseudoscorpions
by Everton Tizo-Pedroso & Kleber Del-Claro - 344-351 Available kin recognition cues may explain why wasp behavior reflects relatedness to nest mates
by Ellouise Leadbeater & Leonardo Dapporto & Stefano Turillazzi & Jeremy Field - 352-358 Quality of breeding territory mediates the influence of paternal quality on sex ratio bias in a free-living bird population
by Sophie C. Bell & Ian P.F. Owens & Alexa M. Lord - 359-367 A sex-specific behavioral syndrome in a wild passerine
by Nolwenn Fresneau & Edward Kluen & Jon E. Brommer - 368-373 Population-level personalities in zebrafish: aggression-boldness across but not within populations
by Emília P. Martins & Anuradha Bhat - 374-377 Diet-mediated social networks in shoaling fish
by Tanja K. Kleinhappel & Oliver H. P. Burman & Elizabeth A. John & Anna Wilkinson & Thomas W. Pike - 378-385 Antipredator behavior: escape flights on a landscape slope
by Tore Slagsvold & Jan Hušek & Jason D. Whittington & Karen L. Wiebe - 386-391 The presence of neighbors influences defense against predators in a cooperatively breeding cichlid
by Jennifer K. Hellmann & Ian M. Hamilton - 392-401 Fallow bucks attend to vocal cues of motivation and fatigue
by Benjamin J. Pitcher & Elodie F. Briefer & Elisabetta Vannoni & Alan G. McElligott - 402-408 Hide and seek: properties of prey and background patterns affect prey detection by blue tits
by Marina Dimitrova & Sami Merilaita - 409-414 Sexual signaling under predation: attractive moths take the greater risks
by Nils Cordes & Leif Engqvist & Tim Schmoll & Klaus Reinhold - 415-423 Trade-offs between personal immunity and reproduction in the burying beetle, Nicrophorus vespilloides
by Catherine E. Reavey & Neil D. Warnock & Heiko Vogel & Sheena C. Cotter - 424-433 Alloparenting in humans: fitness consequences of aunts and uncles on survival in historical Finland
by Aïda Nitsch & Charlotte Faurie & Virpi Lummaa
2014, Volume 25, Issue 1
- 1-3 25 years of Behavioral Ecology
by Leigh W. Simmons - 4-7 Fitness costs as well as benefits are important when considering responses to anthropogenic noise
by Jade Read & Gareth Jones & Andrew N. Radford - 8-11 How does honest costly signaling work?
by James P. Higham - 12-16 Deception down under: is Australia a hot spot for deception?
by Marie E. Herberstein & Heather J. Baldwin & Anne C. Gaskett - 17-26 Editor's choice Multilevel social organization and space use in reticulated giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis)
by Kimberly L. VanderWaal & Hui Wang & Brenda McCowan & Hsieh Fushing & Lynne A. Isbell - 27-34 A multifunctional visual display in elegant trogons targets conspecifics and heterospecifics
by Pierre-Paul Bitton & Stéphanie M. Doucet - 35-43 Selection of interdependent choice of 2 complementary resources
by Nick Ruktanonchai & David L. Smith & Colette M. St. Mary - 44-52 Novel effects of monitoring predators on costs of fleeing and not fleeing explain flushing early in economic escape theory
by William E. Cooper & Daniel T. Blumstein - 53-57 Evidence of female preference for hidden sex signals in distant fish species
by Rodolphe E. Gozlan & Dean Burnard & J. Robert Britton & Demetra Andreou - 58-68 Social elites can emerge naturally when interaction in networks is restricted
by Tamás Dávid-Barrett & R.I.M. Dunbar - 69-75 Asymmetries in premating isolating mechanisms in a sympatric species flock of pupfish (Cyprinodon)
by Astrid Kodric-Brown & Rhiannon J.D. West - 76-87 Sex-specific phenotypic integration: endocrine profiles, coloration, and behavior in fledgling boobies
by Juan A. Fargallo & Alberto Velando & Isabel López-Rull & Natalia Gañán & Natalia Lifshitz & Kazumasa Wakamatsu & Roxana Torres - 88-94 Do paper wasps negotiate over helping effort?
by Lynda Donaldson & Faye J. Thompson & Jeremy Field & Michael A. Cant - 95-101 Individual personality traits influence group exploration in a feral guppy population
by Culum Brown & Eleanor Irving - 102-109 An evolutionary approach to change of status–fertility relationship in human fertility transition
by Jianghua Liu & Virpi Lummaa - 110-116 Attraction to conspecific eggs may guide oviposition site selection in a solitary insect
by Jani Raitanen & Jukka T. Forsman & Sami M. Kivelä & Maarit I. Mäenpää & Panu Välimäki - 117-123 Social dynamics drive selection in cooperative associations of ant queens
by Rebecca M. Clark & Jennifer H. Fewell - 124-135 Necessity or capacity? Physiological state predicts problem-solving performance in house sparrows
by Veronika Bókony & Ádám Z. Lendvai & Csongor I. Vágási & Laura Pătraş & Péter L. Pap & József Németh & Ernő Vincze & Sándor Papp & Bálint Preiszner & Gábor Seress & András Liker - 136-141 Male behavioral type affects female preference in Siamese fighting fish
by Teresa L. Dzieweczynski & Alyssa M. Russell & Lindsay M. Forrette & Krystal L. Mannion - 142-151 Spider aggressiveness determines the bidirectional consequences of host–inquiline interactions
by Carl N. Keiser & Jonathan N. Pruitt - 152-164 Biparental incubation patterns in a high-Arctic breeding shorebird: how do pairs divide their duties?
by Martin Bulla & Mihai Valcu & Anne L. Rutten & Bart Kempenaers - 165-171 Offspring sex ratio varies with clutch size for female house wrens induced to lay supernumerary eggs
by E. Keith Bowers & Charles F. Thompson & Scott K. Sakaluk - 172-179 Effects of age and experience on contest behavior in the burying beetle, Nicrophorus vespilloides
by Victoria E. Lee & Megan L. Head & Mauricio J. Carter & Nick J. Royle - 180-190 Context-, phenotype-, and kin-dependent natal dispersal of barn swallows (Hirundo rustica)
by Chiara Scandolara & Roberto Lardelli & Giovanni Sgarbi & Manuela Caprioli & Roberto Ambrosini & Diego Rubolini & Nicola Saino - 191-199 Group tolerance, dispersal evolution, and the maintenance of polymorphism in recognition cues
by Thotsapol Chaianunporn & Thomas Hovestadt - 200-205 Does male behavioral type correlate with species recognition and stress?
by James J. Muraco & Andrea S. Aspbury & Caitlin R. Gabor - 206-215 Do scatter hoarders trade off increased predation risks for lower rates of cache pilferage?
by Michael A. Steele & Thomas A. Contreras & Leila Z. Hadj-Chikh & Salvatore J. Agosta & Peter D. Smallwood & Chioma N. Tomlinson - 216-222 Reciprocity and conditional cooperation between great tit parents
by Rufus A. Johnstone & Andrea Manica & Annette L. Fayet & Mary Caswell Stoddard & Miguel A. Rodriguez-Gironés & Camilla A. Hinde - 223-227 Food limitation leads to risky decision making and to tradeoffs with oviposition
by Zachary Stahlschmidt & Mary Elizabeth O’Leary & Shelley Adamo - 228-238 Extrapair paternity in Mediterranean blue tits: socioecological factors and the opportunity for sexual selection
by Vicente García-Navas & Esperanza S. Ferrer & Javier Bueno-Enciso & Rafael Barrientos & Juan José Sanz & Joaquín Ortego
2013, Volume 24, Issue 6
- 1271-1278 Editor's choice Uropygial gland volatiles facilitate species recognition between two sympatric sibling bird species
by Yao-Hua Zhang & Yu-Feng Du & Jian-Xu Zhang - 1279-1285 Flight calls signal group and individual identity but not kinship in a cooperatively breeding bird
by Sara C. Keen & C. Daniel Meliza & Dustin R. Rubenstein - 1286-1291 Mating preferences do not maintain the tailspot polymorphism in the platyfish, Xiphophorus variatus
by Zachary W. Culumber & Gil G. Rosenthal - 1292-1298 Magpies do not desert after prolonging the parental care period: an experimental study
by Manuel Soler & Tomás Pérez-Contreras & Liesbeth de Neve - 1299-1305 Ultraviolet crown coloration in female blue tits predicts reproductive success and baseline corticosterone
by Lindsay J. Henderson & Britt J. Heidinger & Neil P. Evans & Kathryn E. Arnold - 1306-1311 Social conflict in ant larvae: egg cannibalism occurs mainly in males and larvae prefer alien eggs
by Eva Schultner & Patrizia d’Ettorre & Heikki Helanterä - 1312-1319 Prey handling performance facilitates competitive dominance of an invasive over native keystone ant
by David M. Bednar & Jonathan Z. Shik & Jules Silverman - 1320-1326 Disassortative mating for boldness decreases reproductive success in the guppy
by Tolulope O. Ariyomo & Penelope J. Watt - 1327-1338 Sexual dimorphism in a feeding apparatus is driven by mate choice and not niche partitioning
by Brian J. Olsen & Russell Greenberg & Jeffrey R. Walters & Robert C. Fleischer - 1339-1347 Effects of foraging and sexual selection on ecomorphology of a fish with alternative reproductive tactics
by Scott F. Colborne & Pedro R. Peres-Neto & Fred J. Longstaffe & Bryan D. Neff - 1348-1355 Why woodcock commute: testing the foraging-benefit and predation-risk hypotheses
by Roger J. Masse & Brian C. Tefft & José A. Amador & Scott R. McWilliams - 1356-1362 Revisiting the evidence for inbreeding avoidance in zebra finches
by Malika Ihle & Wolfgang Forstmeier - 1363-1368 Immediate, independent adjustment of call pitch and amplitude in response to varying background noise by silvereyes (Zosterops lateralis)
by Dominique A. Potvin & Raoul A. Mulder - 1369-1380 Rates of agonism among female primates: a cross-taxon perspective
by Brandon C. Wheeler & Clara J. Scarry & Andreas Koenig - 1381-1389 Variance in mating success does not produce strong sexual selection in a polygynous songbird
by Bridget F. Sousa & David F. Westneat - 1390-1397 Breeding synchronization facilitates extrapair mating for inbreeding avoidance
by Sjouke A. Kingma & Michelle L. Hall & Anne Peters - 1398-1406 The role of beginner’s luck in learning to prefer risky patches by socially foraging house sparrows
by Tomer Ilan & Edith Katsnelson & Uzi Motro & Marcus W. Feldman & Arnon Lotem - 1407-1414 Sexual selection acting on a speciation trait in darters (Percidae: Etheostoma)
by Tory H. Williams & Jennifer M. Gumm & Tamra C. Mendelson - 1415-1425 Inferring activity budgets in wild animals to estimate the consequences of disturbances
by Fredrik Christiansen & Marianne H. Rasmussen & David Lusseau
2013, Volume 24, Issue 5
- 1031-1040 Human behavioral ecology: current research and future prospects
by Daniel Nettle & Mhairi A. Gibson & David W. Lawson & Rebecca Sear - 1041-1042 Why mechanisms shouldn’t be ignored—commentary on Nettle by Brown
by Gillian R. Brown - 1042-1043 Human behavioral ecology—necessary but not sufficient for the evolutionary analysis of human behavior
by Monique Borgerhoff Mulder - 1043-1045 Human behavioral ecology
by Stuart A. West & Maxwell N. Burton-Chellew - 1045-1046 The pleasures and pitfalls of studying humans from a behavioral ecological perspective
by Louise Barrett & Gert Stulp - 1046-1047 Response: how much you need to engage with mechanism depends on what you are trying to do
by Daniel Nettle & Mhairi A. Gibson & David W. Lawson & Rebecca Sear - 1048-1057 Editor's choice Eye for an eyespot: how iridescent plumage ocelli influence peacock mating success
by Roslyn Dakin & Robert Montgomerie - 1058-1067 Honeybee cognitive ecology in a fluctuating agricultural setting of apple and pear trees
by Paula C. Díaz & Andrés Arenas & Vanesa M. Fernández & Cinthia Susic Martin & Alicia M. Basilio & Walter M. Farina - 1068-1080 A meta-analysis of correlated behaviors with implications for behavioral syndromes: relationships between particular behavioral traits
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