Zobrazeno 1 - 9
of 9
pro vyhledávání: '"L. Reifer"'
Publikováno v:
Acta Societatis Botanicorum Poloniae, Vol 32, Iss 1, Pp 191-198 (2015)
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/15ba9bceddff45f09b0de3771f2f23cf
Autor:
Mykell L. Reifer, Sarah J. Harrison, Donovan T. Tremblay, Gita R. Kolluru, Susan M. Bertram, Roslyn Dakin
Publikováno v:
Animal Behaviour. 184:157-171
Sexual displays can be energetically taxing, power-limited tests of endurance that favour the vigorous. Therefore, these displays may reliably indicate the ability to pay the energetic costs of sustained motor performance. Field cricket calling song
Autor:
Amy E. Villarreal, Susan M. Bertram, Gita R. Kolluru, Mykell L. Reifer, Matthew J. Muzzatti, Danya D. Yaremchuk
Publikováno v:
Behavioural processes. 188
Sexually selected traits, including threat signals, have been shown to scale steeply positively with body size because their exaggeration maximizes honest signalling. However, the functional allometry hypothesis makes the opposite prediction for some
Publikováno v:
Animal Behaviour. 139:137-146
Researchers examining how nutrition impacts fitness traits usually examine one nutrient at a time, ignoring potential interactions. When researchers simultaneously examine multiple nutrients, their studies often focus on adults, ignoring potential ch
Autor:
Mykell L. Reifer, Deborah H. Corlett, Patricia Adair Gowaty, Susan M. Bertram, Michelle J. Loranger, Ian R. Thomson, Sarah J. Harrison, Genevieve L. Ferguson
Publikováno v:
Animal Behaviour. 133:101-108
Male mate choice is an often neglected aspect of sexual selection studies. While theory predicts that females should exhibit mate choice due to their comparatively greater investment in gametes, males may also exhibit mate choice for a variety of rea
Autor:
Sarah J. Harrison, Ian R. Thomson, Susan M. Bertram, Patricia Adair Gowaty, Deborah H. Corlett, Michelle J. Loranger, Mykell L. Reifer, Genevieve L. Ferguson
Publikováno v:
Ethology. 123:793-799
Male mating preferences are often a neglected aspect of studies on sexual selection. Male mating preferences may evolve if they provide males with direct-fitness benefits such as increased opportunity to fertilize more eggs or indirect-fitness benefi
Autor:
Genevieve L. Ferguson, Sarah J. Harrison, Ian R. Thomson, Susan M. Bertram, Patricia Adair Gowaty, Deborah H. Corlett, Michelle J. Loranger, Mykell L. Reifer
Publikováno v:
Animal Behaviour. 119:75-86
Indirect fitness benefits hypotheses suggest that offspring of preferred mates should exhibit greater survival or reproductive success. For example, good genes hypotheses propose that female mating preferences are mediated by secondary sexual traits
Publikováno v:
Acta biochimica Polonica. 16(2)
Akademický článek
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