Carneiro, Camilo Gunnarsson, Tómas G Alves, José A
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractMatching the timing of annual cycle events with the required resources can have crucial consequences for individual fitness. But as the annual cycle is composed of sequential events, a delay at any point may be carried over to the subsequent stage (or more, in a domino effect) and negatively influence individual performance. To investigate ...
Hardy, Nate B Forister, Matthew L
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractWhat causes host use specificity in herbivorous insects? Population genetic models predict specialization when habitat preference can evolve and there is antagonistic pleiotropy at a performance-affecting locus. But empirically for herbivorous insects, host use performance is governed by many genetic loci, and antagonistic pleiotropy seems ...
Harrison, Lauren M Vega-Trejo, Regina Jennions, Michael D
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractFight outcomes often affect male fitness by determining their access to mates. Thus, "winner-loser" effects, where winners often win their next contest while losers tend to lose, can influence how males allocate resources toward pre- and postcopulatory traits. We experimentally manipulated the winning/losing experiences of pairs of size-mat...
Phillips, Joseph S Einarsson, Árni Strickland, Kasha Ives, Anthony R Kristjánsson, Bjarni K Räsänen, Katja
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractUncovering the demographic basis of population fluctuations is a central goal of population biology. This is particularly challenging for spatially structured populations, which require disentangling synchrony in demographic rates from coupling via movement between locations. In this study, we fit a stage-structured metapopulation model to ...
Giaimo, Stefano Traulsen, Arne
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractA common measure of generation time is the average distance between two recruitment events along a genetic lineage. In populations with stage structure that live in a constant environment, this generation time can be computed from the elasticities of stable population growth to fecundities, and it is equivalent to another common measure of ...
Bacon, Ryan Washington, Dante Johnson, Maya-K Burns, Mercedes
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractSexual conflict is a mechanism of selection driven by the divergent fitness interests between females and males. This disagreement can be great enough to promote antagonistic/defensive traits and behaviors. Although the existence of sexual conflict has been identified in many species, less research has explored the conditions that initially...
Raffard, Allan Campana, Julie L M Legrand, Delphine Schtickzelle, Nicolas Jacob, Staffan
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractDispersal is a key process mediating ecological and evolutionary dynamics. Its effects on the dynamics of spatially structured systems, population genetics, and species range distribution can depend on phenotypic differences between dispersing and nondispersing individuals. However, scaling up the importance of resident-disperser difference...
Alonzo, Suzanne H
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractSexual selection is a powerful force shaping not only the details but also the breadth of what we see in nature. Yet so much unexplained variation remains. Organisms often solve the "problem" of how to pass on their genes in ways that do not fit our current expectations. I argue here that integrating empirical surprises will push our unders...
Briscoe, Adriana Darielle Mejía
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractPeople of Mexican origin in the United States have long experienced discrimination in wages, housing, and schooling, which directly impacts their participation in the STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) workforce. Using interviews of Latina scientists and teachers, autoethnography, family and newspaper archives, and his...
McGinley, Rowan H Starrett, James Bond, Jason E Hebets, Eileen A
Published in
The American naturalist
AbstractLight availability is highly variable, yet predictable, over various timescales and is expected to play an important role in the evolution of visual signals. Courtship displays of the wolf spider genus Schizocosa always involve the use of substrate-borne vibrations; however, there is substantial variation in the presence and complexity of v...