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  • Articles  (10,698)
  • Oxford University Press  (10,698)
  • Behavioral Ecology  (717)
  • Astronomy and Geophysics  (445)
  • 3548
  • 8197
  • 1
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-09-23
    Print ISSN: 1366-8781
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  • 2
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-09-23
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  • 3
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-09-23
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  • 4
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-09-23
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  • 5
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-09-23
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  • 6
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-09-23
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  • 7
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-09-23
    Description: Sheila Peacock reports on a meeting that explored the UK's contribution to seismology in the past, present and future.
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  • 8
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-09-23
    Description: Jenny Collier , marine geophysicist and President of the BGA, explains why she is addicted to science.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: Females of many animal species seek mating opportunities with multiple males, despite being able to obtain sufficient sperm to father their offspring from a single male. In animals that live in stable social groups, females often choose to mate outside their group resulting in extra-group paternity (EGP). One reason proposed to explain female choice for extra-group males is to obtain compatible genes, for example, in order to avoid inbreeding depression in offspring. The benefits of such extra-group paternities could be substantial if they result in fitter, outbred offspring. However, avoiding inbreeding in this way could be costly for females, for example, through retaliation by cuckolded males or through receiving aggression while prospecting for extra-group mating opportunities. We investigate the costs and benefits of EGP in the banded mongoose Mungos mungo , a cooperatively breeding mammal in which within-group mates are sometimes close relatives. We find that pups born to females that mate with extra-group males are more genetically heterozygous are heavier and are more likely to survive to independence than pups born to females that mate within their group. However, extra-group matings also involve substantial costs as they occur during violent encounters that sometimes result in injury and death. This appears to lead femalebanded mongooses to adaptively adjust EGP levels according to the current risk of inbreeding associated with mating within the group. For group-living animals, the costs of intergroup interactions may help to explain variation in both inbreeding rates and EGP within and between species.
    Print ISSN: 1045-2249
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: Many species living in developed areas adjust the timing of their activity and habitat selection to avoid humans, which may reduce their risk of conflict, including vehicle collisions. Understanding the behavioral adaptations to vehicles exhibited by species that thrive in urban areas could improve the conservation of many species that are threatened by road-caused mortality. We explored these behaviors using the seasonal distribution of 80 road-killed coyotes ( Canis latrans ) collected by civic employees and by comparing the activity patterns (step lengths) and road crossings made by 19 coyotes fitted with GPS collars with 3-h fix rates, 7 of which were killed in vehicle collisions. Coyotes were collected on roads most often in spring and fall, which corresponded to the most rapid changes in day length in our northern study area and when collared road-killed coyotes were more active during rush hour. Among collared coyotes, those that were killed on roads were most active and crossed roads most frequently at dusk. By contrast, surviving animals were most active and crossed roads most often near midnight year round and surprisingly, exhibited less avoidance of roads than did road-killed coyotes. Our results suggest that risk of vehicle collision is lower for coyotes that restrict the times at which they cross roads but some coyotes do not or cannot. Such behavioral flexibility to adapt to the timing of human activity relative to exogenous cues such as dawn and dusk may contribute to differences both among and within wildlife species in rates of coexistence with humans.
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: Group living in animals is a well-studied phenomenon, having been documented extensively in a wide range of terrestrial, freshwater, and marine species. Although social dynamics are complex across space and time, recent technological and analytical advances enable deeper understanding of their nature and ecological implications. While for some taxa, a great deal of information is known regarding the mechanistic underpinnings of these social processes, knowledge of these mechanisms in elasmobranchs is lacking. Here, we used an integrative and novel combination of direct observation, accelerometer biologgers, and recent advances in network analysis to better understand the mechanistic bases of individual-level differences in sociality (leadership, network attributes) and diel patterns of locomotor activity in a widespread marine predator, the lemon shark ( Negaprion brevirostris ). We found that dynamic models of interaction based on Markov chains can accurately predict juvenile lemon shark social behavior and that lemon sharks did not occupy consistent positions within their network. Lemon sharks did however preferentially associate with specific group members, by sex as well as by similarity or nonsimilarity for a number of behavioral (nonsimilarity: leadership) and locomotor traits (similarity: proportion of time swimming "fast," mean swim duration; nonsimilarity: proportion of swimming bursts/transitions between activity states). Our study provides some of the first information on the mechanistic bases of group living and personality in sharks and further, a potential experimental approach for studying fine-scale differences in behavior and locomotor patterns in difficult-to-study organisms.
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: Sexually selected traits are often driven to costly extremes by persistent directional selection. Energy acquisition and allocation can therefore influence variation in traits subject to both precopulatory and postcopulatory sexual selection, though the later have received much less attention. We tested the condition dependence of sperm morphology, sperm count, and fertilization success in a promiscuous lizard ( Anolis sagrei ) by 1) collecting sperm samples from wild males that varied naturally in body condition, 2) experimentally altering the body condition of captive males through dietary restriction, and 3) analyzing genetic paternity data from competitive mating trials between captive males that differed in body condition. In both wild and captive males, the length of the sperm midpiece decreased with body condition. Experimental food restriction decreased sperm production, decreased length of the sperm head, increased length of the sperm midpiece, and increased variance in sperm morphology within individuals. When restricted to a single copulation, males on high-intake diets exhibited a slight but nonsignificant fertilization advantage. Reanalysis of a previous experiment in which high- and low-condition males were sequentially allowed to copulate ad libitum for 1 week revealed a significant fertilization bias in favor of high-condition males. When controlling for mean treatment effects on the proportion of offspring sired and on sperm phenotypes, multiple regression revealed negative correlations between fertilization success and sperm head length, midpiece length, and sperm count. Collectively, our results suggest that condition-dependent fertilization success in A. sagrei may be partially mediated by underlying condition dependence of sperm morphology and sperm count.
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: The postfledging dependence period (PFDP) is a crucial stage in the development of altricial birds. This period is regulated by parental investment, in terms of food provisioning and protection, and the demands of young associated with their development and physical condition. We examine the relative role of parental investment, food provisioning, and offspring decisions on the PFDP regulation in the Spanish imperial eagle ( Aquila adalberti ) by comparing the PFDP timing among young from non-manipulated territories, food supplemented territories, and birds translocated by hacking methods in the absence of adults and with ad libitum food supply. We found that extra food homogenized the nutritional condition of young and reduced the length of the first stage of PFDP, which is related to flight development and thus dependent on body condition. However, hacked birds did not reduce this stage despite ad libitum food, likely due to the lack of parental stimulus to develop advanced flights. Although the presence of adults might accelerate young becoming independent, hacked birds did not extend significantly the whole PFDP and all birds eventually started dispersal. Thereby, the PFDP regulation was primarily under offspring control, and modulated secondarily by parental effects independently of food provisioning and laying date. The length of this period seems to be constrained mainly by the inherent benefits of early dispersal on ultimate fitness in accordance with ontogenic hypotheses. In addition, hacking was shown to be an effective translocation method when properly used, without negative drawbacks for young development during the PFDP.
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  • 14
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
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  • 15
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
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  • 16
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
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  • 17
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
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  • 18
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
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  • 19
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
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  • 20
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
    Description: Simon Mitton summarizes the RAS Specialist Discussion Meeting that examined from a historical perspective Hoyle's remarkable career and the impact of his science, in the first of two articles on his scientific legacy.
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  • 21
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
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  • 22
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
    Description: Fred Hoyle's interest in geophysics has been largely forgotten; Helge Kragh takes another look.
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  • 23
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
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  • 24
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
    Description: Assessments of the risk posed by near-Earth objects ignore the possibility of a giant comet entering the inner solar system. Bill Napier, David Asher, Mark Bailey and Duncan Steel examine the likelihood and potential consequences of the appearance of such a centaur.
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  • 26
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
    Description: Toby Samuels and Natasha Nicholson report on a debate over the pros and cons of turning humans into martians.
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  • 27
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
    Description: Nevil Maskelyne became the fifth Astronomer Royal 250 years ago, at a time when science and politics were intertwined. Paul Edwards maps his career.
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  • 28
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
    Description: Space physicist Mike Lockwood , who was awarded the RAS Gold Medal in 2015, was inspired by his school physics teacher, JFK and Feynman.
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  • 29
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: In antagonistic encounters, the primary decision to be made is to fight or not. Animals may then possess adaptations to assess fighting ability in their opponents. Previous studies suggest that humans can assess strength and fighting ability based on facial appearance. Here we extend these findings to specific contests by examining the perception of male faces from paired winners and losers of individual fights in mixed martial arts sporting competitions. Observers, unfamiliar with the outcome, were presented with image pairs and asked to choose which of the 2 men was more likely to win if they fought while other observers chose between the faces based on masculinity, strength, aggressiveness, and attractiveness. We found that individuals performed at rates above chance in correctly selecting the winner as more likely to win the fight than the loser. We also found that winners were seen to be more masculine, stronger, and more aggressive than losers. Finally, women saw the winners as more attractive than the losers. Together these findings demonstrate that 1) humans can predict the outcome of specific fighting contests based on facial cues, 2) perceived masculinity and strength are putative cues to fighting success available from faces, and 3) facial cues associated with successful male–male competition are attractive to women.
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: Assessing an opponent’s strength is an important component of attack strategies in territorial combats between males. Body size is often considered to directly influence an individual’s strength, but other honest visual signals may also affect the assessment of opponents. Among such visual signals are the so-called egg-spots, a conspicuous ovoid marking on the anal fin of male haplochromine cichlid fishes, made up of carotenoid-containing and other pigment cells. It has long been assumed that egg-spots are mainly relevant in courtship and spawning behavior, and previous work has focused primarily on their function in intersexual selection. Recently, however, both body size and egg-spots have been suggested to play a role in male–male interactions. To test whether egg-spots function in female choice or whether egg-spots and/or body size function as a predictor of strength and the subsequent attack strategy in male–male interactions, we performed a series of behavioral experiments in the haplochromine cichlid Astatotilapia calliptera . The trials revealed a limited involvement of egg-spots in female choice, yet a much stronger influence in male interactions. Territorial males combined information from the strength assessment based on body size and egg-spots to adopt their attack strategies. They launched more attacks against the larger intruder with many egg-spots compared with the smaller intruder without or with fewer egg-spots. Our study provides evidence that egg-spots serve as honest visual signal and that the level of asymmetries in egg-spot pattern and body size determines the relative impact of each trait in strength assessment.
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: Evaluating the costs and benefits of dispersal on individual life history is critical to understanding its importance to ecology and evolution. In feral horses ( Equus ferus caballus ), females may permanently move among breeding groups (bands) during their lifetime (termed social dispersal). Here, we assess costs and benefits of adult female social dispersal using 7 years of movement and life history data from an individual-based study of feral horses on Sable Island. Using path and survival analyses, we explored relationships between social dispersal, female reproduction, and survival of offspring. Dispersal negatively correlated with a female’s next reproduction (probability to produce a living foal that was observed during our summer census) and reproductive success (RS) over the longer term (probability of producing foals in subsequent years). Females that dispersed had longer latency before next reproduction than nondispersing (philopatric) females. We could not measure costs in terms of induced abortions or neonatal survival, but we observed no evidence of infanticide during our summer censuses. Furthermore, overwinter survival of foals to 3 years of age was not affected by either dispersal of its mother before conception or as pregnant. Despite a 10% higher rate for foals dispersing with mothers to survive to 3 years compared with those of philopatric females, the difference was not statistically significant. Overall, our results suggest that dispersing individuals have lower RS that may be a cost of social dispersal on future reproduction.
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: Large mammalian carnivores create areas perceived as having high and low risk by their ungulate prey. Human activities can indirectly shape this landscape of fear by altering behavior and spatial distribution of carnivores. We studied how red deer perceive the landscape of fear in an old-growth forest system (Białowieza Primeval Forest, Poland) both at large and fine spatial scale. Camera traps were placed at locations with and without tree logs (fine-scale risk factor) and at different distances from the core of a wolf territory and human settlements (large-scale risk factor). Red deer avoided coming close to large tree logs and increased their vigilance levels when they were present in close vicinity. The strength of these effects depended on the distance to the wolf core area; deer perceived tree logs as more risky when wolves were more often present. Hence, tree logs inside wolf core areas create fine-scale patches of fear with reduced deer browsing pressure, thereby enhancing chances for successful tree recruitment. Human presence shapes this landscape of fear as wolf core areas are located far from human settlements. This "human shadow" on predator–prey interactions is therefore an important component that should be taken into account in human-dominated landscapes.
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: Why do females faced with the same array of potential mates often select different males? Variation in choosiness, defined as investment in mate search, is an important potential source of variation in mating decisions. Experimental work suggests such variation is driven by the costs of searching, but data from natural populations are scarce and few studies have addressed explicitly the counteracting benefits expected from search investment. We tracked male visitation behavior of free-ranging females on a lek of lance-tailed manakins ( Chiroxiphia lanceolata ) using automated telemetry at dispersed male display sites. We assessed relationships of female age, experience, body condition, and parasite load with variation in choosiness, quantified as males visited, number of visits, and visit duration. Young females visited more males and made more total visits before choosing a mate, whereas older females conducted longer visits for first nests of the year. Renesting females searched less, but the few monitored females mating faithfully between years nevertheless sampled several males. We found little support for effects of condition on choosiness. Results suggest females sample more widely when they lack information about the distribution of available mates. Though previous work in the study population has shown both female preference for and offspring fitness benefits from heterozygous sires, genetic tests of paternity revealed choosier females did not choose more heterozygous mates. Females’ investment in mate search varied in relation to their own age and within-year experience, but mate search investment did not independently determine variation in choice among individuals.
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: Urban animals often show differences in aggression relative to their rural counterparts, but the ultimate and proximate origins of these differences are poorly understood. Here, we compared urban and rural song sparrows ( Melospiza melodia ), a species for which higher levels of aggression in urban populations have previously been reported. First, we confirmed elevated territorial aggression levels in urban birds relative to rural birds over multiple years. To begin to identify the environmental variables contributing to these differences, we related aggression to features of the social and physical environment, specifically population density and the availability of suitable nesting vegetation. Population distribution and the availability of suitable nest vegetation were not correlated with territorial aggression levels. Subsequently, we conducted a food supplementation experiment to determine whether potential differences in the relative availability of food between the 2 habitats might drive differences in aggression. Food supplementation increased territorial aggression significantly, particularly in rural birds. Thus, it appears that the availability of food could play a role in determining territorial aggression in song sparrows. The specific combination of these features found in urban areas may cause the increased levels of territorial aggression seen in these populations.
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: A critical question in the study of the evolution of cognition and the brain concerns the extent to which variation in cognitive processes and associated neural mechanisms is adaptive and shaped by natural selection. In order to be available to selection, cognitive traits and their neural architecture must show heritable variation within a population, yet heritability of cognitive and neural traits is not often investigated in the field of behavioral ecology. In this commentary, we outline existing research pertaining to the relative influences of genes and environment in cognitive and underlying neural trait variation, as well as what is known of their heritable genetic architecture by focusing on several cognitive traits that have received much attention in behavioral ecology. It is important to demonstrate that cognitive traits can respond to selection, and we advocate for an increased emphasis on investigating trait heritability for enhancing our understanding of the ecological, genetic and neurobiological mechanisms that have shaped interspecific and intraspecific variation in cognitive traits.
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2015-11-20
    Description: Two recent observations in behavioral biology have sparked great interest and have already yielded many novel and intriguing insights. Bacteria appear to live lives of unforeseen behavioral complexity, and the consistent behavioral variation among individual animals is often not "noise" but turns out to be a highly relevant ecological and evolutionary feature in itself. Research covering these 2 phenomena has proceeded largely in isolation, and the rich behavioral lives of bacteria have not yet been studied with consistent interindividual behavioral differences in mind. Yet, the parallels between animal and bacterial behavior that are increasingly being uncovered, as well as the particular characteristics of bacteria, point toward a new approach in the study of consistent individual variation in behavior. Using bacteria can bring fruitful opportunities to the field and allows researchers to address questions that are very difficult to pursue using animal model systems. Notwithstanding a few challenges, bacteria can provide an alternative study system that may elucidate several evolutionary and ecological aspects of consistent individual behavioral variation.
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  • 41
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
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    Oxford University Press
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  • 43
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    Oxford University Press
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2015-11-21
    Description: Alexander Russell , Anthony Yeates and Jonathan Eastwood review the state of the art and interesting future directions in this developing field, drawing on the RAS discussion meeting held on 12 December 2014.
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: The fitness and survival of organisms ultimately depend on their feeding. Therefore, foraging behaviors should be selected to maximize cost-benefit ratio. Wind may restrict and modify animal movements increasing the cost of foraging, especially when the animal carries resources that intercept wind. We quantified the effect of wind on the foraging of leaf-cutting ants and evaluated whether this effect varies with 1) leaf fragment traits, such as area, mass, and shape, and 2) the characteristics of the foraging trail system. We also tested whether these ants show a short-term response to wind by selecting loads with characteristics that reduce wind interception, and a long-term response, by arranging the spatial design of the trail system in a way that reduces that effect. We found that in windy conditions, the speed of loaded ants was reduced by 55%, and ants were blown off the trail 28 times more than in windless conditions. However, wind only affected ants walking along trails that were perpendicular to wind direction or parallel upwind. Wind effect increased with area, mass, and shape of loads. At the short term, ants reduced the negative effect of wind by selecting smaller, lighter, or more elongated loads. However, trails showed no particular spatial distribution in relation to wind direction. This is the first study that quantifies the negative consequences of wind on leaf-cutting ants’ foraging and reports behaviors that can reduce this effect. Our work illustrates how short-term behavioral responses can mitigate the negative effect of an understudied environmental factor on ant foraging.
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: The temporal partitioning hypothesis suggests that the evolution of different diel activity rhythms in animals might facilitate the coexistence between prey and predators. However, the temporal shift of habitat use induced by predation has rarely been observed. The study of such a mechanism is particularly relevant for introduced species because it might explain how native species can persist or decline in response to the presence of alien species. The introduction of fish into ponds inhabited by amphibians has severe consequences for their occurrence and abundance. Fish particularly affect an alternative newt phenotype, the paedomorph, which does not undergo metamorphosis and maintains larval traits such as gills at the adult stage. In a laboratory design, we assessed the diel patterns of habitat use in the 2 distinct morphological phenotypes of palmate newt ( Lissotriton helveticus ) in the presence or absence of goldfish ( Carassius auratus ). Both newt phenotypes avoided a risky habitat more in the presence than in the absence of fish. This habitat shift was more pronounced during the daytime (i.e., when the risk could be considered higher for the newts) than during nighttime. However, in contrast to metamorphs, paedomorphs showed less adaptive changes according to temporal risk and remained in their shelter for most of the time. Temporal and habitat partitioning at the diel scale between native and alien species might promote their coexistence, but diel change can also imply a cost in the overall reduction of the time allocated to essential activities, showing that species interactions remain complex.
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Translocation is an important conservation management tool. However, not all individuals are equally suited to translocation, and temperament traits (e.g., boldness, reactivity, exploration, sociability, and aggression) are likely to influence survival in a new environment. A few empirical studies have examined the consequences of personality differences on captive-bred translocated animals, but this has not been done for wild-caught animals. We compared behavioral responses to trapping, processing, holding, and release for 56 wild common brushtail possums ( Trichosurus vulpecula ). Twenty individuals were captured twice, once to attach radio-tracking collars, the second time (2 weeks later) for the translocation. Consistency of behavioral responses was compared between capture events and radio-tracking allowed estimates of pretranslocation home range, rest site selection, and foraging behavior. Survivors ( n = 10 survivors, 5 months later) were individuals showing the most fear or emotional reactivity during holding (less likely to have slept, eaten, defecated, or nested) and those that had the smallest home ranges and selected the safest den sites in their original habitat. Conversely, the greatest increase in body mass was recorded for individuals that had demonstrated "unsafe" behavior in their original habitat. To our knowledge, this is the first time this type of behavioral screening during handling and holding prior to release as part of a translocation has been undertaken. These methods have broad applicability for screening potential translocation candidates and are easily translated to a range of threatened and vulnerable animal species.
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: The distribution and abundance of food resources are among the most important factors that influence animal behavioral strategies. Yet, spatial variation in feeding habitat quality is often difficult to assess with traditional methods that rely on extrapolation from plot survey data or remote sensing. Here, we show that maximum entropy species distribution modeling can be used to successfully predict small-scale variation in the distribution of 24 important plant food species for chimpanzees at Gombe National Park, Tanzania. We combined model predictions with behavioral observations to quantify feeding habitat quality as the cumulative dietary proportion of the species predicted to occur in a given location. This measure exhibited considerable spatial heterogeneity with elevation and latitude, both within and across main habitat types. We used model results to assess individual variation in habitat selection among adult chimpanzees during a 10-year period, testing predictions about trade-offs between foraging and reproductive effort. We found that nonswollen females selected the highest-quality habitats compared with swollen females or males, in line with predictions based on their energetic needs. Swollen females appeared to compromise feeding in favor of mating opportunities, suggesting that females rather than males change their ranging patterns in search of mates. Males generally occupied feeding habitats of lower quality, which may exacerbate energetic challenges of aggression and territory defense. Finally, we documented an increase in feeding habitat quality with community residence time in both sexes during the dry season, suggesting an influence of familiarity on foraging decisions in a highly heterogeneous landscape.
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Despite parents are equally related to all of their progeny, they may differentially invest in offspring that provide the highest fitness return. Sons and daughters can differ in reproductive value, especially in species where fitness is predicted by the expression of sexually selected traits. In many birds, offspring plumage coloration functions as a honest signal of individual quality, thus allowing parents to differentially invest in offspring of either sex accordingly. Here, we tested whether parents allocate different amounts of food depending on plumage color of their male and female offspring. As a model, we used the barn swallow ( Hirundo rustica ), a species where large among- and within-brood variation in ventral plumage color exists and male reproductive success varies according to ventral plumage coloration. We recorded the proportion of feedings obtained and body mass variation by dyads of same-sex and similar-sized nestlings subjected to either experimental darkening of their ventral plumage color or to a sham treatment. Plumage darkening enhanced food provisioning and body mass gain of males but not of females. Because darker ventral coloration is associated with larger reproductive success in male barn swallows, these results suggest that parents tune their effort toward more valuable male offspring that are likely to provide the greatest fitness returns. Our study thus suggests that parents are selected to differentially invest in offspring of either sex according to a trait expressed in early life, which is relevant to intrasexual competition for access to mates at sexual maturity.
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: The iconic red hourglass of the black widow spiders (genus Latrodectus ) is traditionally considered an aposematic signal, yet experimental evidence is lacking. Here, we present data that suggest that black widow coloration may have evolved to be an aposematic signal that is more conspicuous to their vertebrate predators than to their insect prey. In choice experiments with wild birds, we found that the red-and-black coloration deters potential predators: Wild birds were ~3 times less likely to attack a black widow model with an hourglass than one without. Using visual-system appropriate models, we also found that a black widow’s red-and-black color combo is more apparent to a typical bird than a typical insect. Additionally, an ancestral reconstruction reveals that red dorsal coloration is ancestral in black widows and that at some point some North American widows lost their red dorsal coloration. Behaviorally, differences in red dorsal coloration between 2 North American species are accompanied by differences in microhabitat that affects how often a bird will view a black widow’s dorsal region. All observations are consistent with a cost–benefit trade-off of being more conspicuous to predators than to prey. We suggest that limiting detection by prey may help explain why red and black aposematic signals occur frequently in nature.
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: While conducting a toxicity assessment of the antidepressant paroxetine (Paxil®), in wild-derived mice ( Mus musculus ), we observed that exposed dams (P 0 ) produced female biased litters (32:68 M:F). Though numerous experimental manipulations have induced sex ratio bias in mice, none have assessed the fitness of the offspring from these litters relative to controls. Here, we retrospectively analyze experimentally derived fitness data gathered for the purpose of toxicological assessment in light of 2 leading hypothesis (Trivers–Willard hypothesis [TWH] and cost of reproduction hypothesis [CRH]), seeking to test if this facultative sex ratio adjustment fits into an adaptive framework. Control F 1 males were heavier than F 1 females, but no differences in mass were detected between exposed F 1 males and females, suggesting that exposed dams did not save energy by producing fewer males, despite producing 29.2% lighter litters relative to controls. F 1 offspring of both treatments were released into seminatural enclosures where fitness was quantified. In enclosures, the relative reproductive success of F 1 -exposed males (compared with controls) was reduced by ~20% compared with the relative reproductive success of F 1 -exposed females. Thus, exposed dams increased their fitness by adjusting litters toward females who were less negatively affected by the exposure than males. Collectively, these data provide less support that the observed sex ratio bias results in energetic savings (CRH), and more support for the TWH because fitness was increased by biasing litters toward female offspring. These mammalian data are unique in their ability to support the TWH through the use of relevant fitness data.
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Understanding how seabirds and other central place foragers locate food resources represents a key step in predicting responses to changes in resource abundance and distribution. Where prey distributions are unpredictable and ephemeral, seabirds may gain up-to-date information by monitoring the direction of birds returning to the colony or by monitoring the foraging behavior of other birds through local enhancement. However, search strategies based on social information may require high population densities, raising concerns about the potential loss of information in declining populations. Our objectives were to explore the mechanisms that underpin effective search strategies based on social information under a range of population densities and different foraging conditions. Testing relevant hypotheses through field observation is challenging because of limitations in the ability to manipulate population densities and foraging conditions. We therefore developed a spatially explicit individual-based foraging model, informed by data on the movement and foraging patterns of seabirds foraging on pelagic prey, and used model simulations to investigate the mechanisms underpinning search strategies. Orientation of outbound headings in line with returning birds enables departing birds to avoid areas without prey even at relatively low population densities. The mechanisms underpinning local enhancement are more effective as population densities increase and may be facilitated by other mechanisms that concentrate individuals in profitable areas. For seabirds and other central place foragers foraging on unpredictable and ephemeral food resources, information is especially valuable when resources are spatially concentrated and may play an important role in mitigating poor foraging conditions.
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Experiments designed to quantify the effects of increasing numbers of carers on levels of offspring care are rare in cooperative breeding systems, where offspring are reared by individuals additional to the breeding pair. This paucity might stem from disagreement over the most appropriate manipulations necessary to elucidate these effects. Here, we perform both carer removal and brood enhancement experiments to test the effects of numbers of carers and carer:offspring ratios on provisioning rates in the cooperatively breeding chestnut-crowned babbler ( Pomatostomus ruficeps ). Removing carers caused linear reductions in overall brood provisioning rates. Further analyses failed to provide evidence that this effect was influenced by territory quality or disruption of group dynamics stemming from the removals. Likewise, adding nestlings to broods caused linear increases in brood provisioning rates, suggesting carers are responsive to increasing offspring demand. However, the 2 experiments did not generate quantitatively equivalent results: Each nestling received more food following brood size manipulation than carer removal, despite comparable carer:offspring ratios in each. Following an at-hatching split-design cross-fostering manipulation to break any links between prehatching maternal effects and posthatching begging patterns, we found that begging intensity increased in larger broods after controlling for metrics of hunger. These findings suggest that manipulation of brood size can, in itself, influence nestling provisioning rates when begging intensity is affected by scramble competition. We highlight that carer number and brood size manipulations are complimentary but not equivalent; adopting both can yield greater overall insight into carer effects in cooperative breeding systems.
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Dispersal affects the social contexts individuals experience by redistributing individuals in space, and the nature of social interactions can have important fitness consequences. During the vagrancy stage of natal dispersal, after an individual has left its natal site and before it has settled to breed, social affiliations might be predicted by opportunities to associate (e.g., distance in space and time between natal points of origin) or kin preferences. We investigated the social structure of a population of juvenile great tits ( Parus major ) and asked whether social affiliations during vagrancy were predicted by 1) the distance between natal nest-boxes, 2) synchrony in fledge dates, and 3) accounting for spatial and temporal predictors, whether siblings tended to stay together. We show that association strength was affected predominantly by spatial proximity at fledging and, to a lesser extent, temporal proximity in birth dates. Independently of spatial and temporal effects, sibling pairs associated more often than expected by chance. Our results suggest that the structure of the winter population is shaped primarily by limits to dispersal through incomplete population mixing. In addition, our results reveal kin structure, and hence the scope for fitness-related interactions between particular classes of kin. Both spatial-mediated and socially mediated population structuring can have implications for our understanding of the evolution of sociality.
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Cultural transmission in nonhuman animals is often sex biased, with females more frequently or efficiently learning cultural behaviors than males. The evolutionary origins of sex-biased cultural transmission have been a mystery, though it has been proposed that female offspring may gain greater reproductive benefit from cultural traits than sons—the "disparate benefits" hypothesis. I propose a different, "uniparental teaching," hypothesis where sex-biased transmission evolves in uniparental species if mothers teach, that is, invest in their offsprings’ learning. I show, with theoretical models, that mothers evolve to invest more in teaching daughters than sons because teaching daughters results in greater inclusive fitness benefits. Teaching a son gives him a reproductive benefit for one generation. However, I show that because daughters may teach future generations, teaching a daughter can be a better long-term investment. I also model the disparate benefits hypothesis and show that the uniparental teaching hypothesis better fits the empirical patterns of sex-biased transmission in the well-studied example of "sponging" in bottlenose dolphins. Uniparental teaching may also explain sex-biased transmission in other species, including chimpanzees. My findings suggest that controversial mechanisms of cultural transmission in nonhumans, such as teaching, may be inferred from population-level patterns of transmission even when it is difficult to observe transmission directly in the field or laboratory.
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Iteroparous organisms face a trade-off between reproduction and survival, but knowledge of whether how and when costs of long-term increases in workload are paid is scant. We increased locomotion costs for a whole year by equipping male great tits with a backpack during breeding, removing the backpacks 1 year later. We applied 3 different treatments: control (without backpack), light ("empty" backpack, 0.1g), and heavy ("full" backpack, 0.9g, ~5% of body mass). Backpacks were administered in 3 cohorts, and we monitored effects on mass of nestlings and the male, wing length, reproduction, and survival. Added mass had a negative effect on nestling mass in both the starting year of the experiment and 1 year later, but not on production of fledglings or recruits. In winter and the next breeding season, males equipped with heavy backpacks had a higher (net) body mass and had shorter third primary feathers than the other 2 groups. Heavy backpack males were less likely to sleep in a nest box in winter. Nest boxes are optimal roosting sites, and we interpret this finding as a treatment effect on success in competition over this resource. However, there was no effect of the manipulation on survival. Overall, we found no long-term fitness consequences, and we discuss possible explanations and implications for the "starvation–predation theory" of optimal body mass. However, we found short-term effects of carrying extra weight suggesting that behavioral studies using small devices should consider the effects of equipping small non-migratory passerines with devices such as transmitters.
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Behavior is usually the first line of defense against parasites. Antiparasite behaviors, such as grooming, or outright avoidance, have been shown to reduce the risk of parasitism in a wide variety of host–parasite systems. However, despite the central importance of antiparasite behavior, little is known about the extent to which prior exposure to parasites improves effectiveness. Here, we report the results of a 2-year study designed to test whether exposure to parasites can "prime" behavior, loosely analogous to priming of the immune system. We tested whether preening improves with experience by infesting captive-bred rock pigeons ( Columba livia ) with 2 common species of rock pigeon feather lice. We infested "primed" birds in Years 1 and 2 of the study and "nonprimed" birds only in Year 2. Birds with lice preened about a third more, on average, than birds without lice. Birds subsequently cleared of lice resumed preening at the same rate as birds that never had lice. Thus, our results confirm that preening is an inducible, reversible defense that is partly triggered by the presence of lice. Surprisingly, primed birds did not differ significantly from nonprimed birds in the overall rate or the efficacy of preening. Primed and nonprimed birds preened at similar rates and had similar numbers of lice at the end of the study. Our results therefore provide little evidence that antiparasite behavior improves with experience, at least in the case of preening as a defense against feather lice.
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Acoustic communication signals are often involved in mate-choice decisions. The decision for the best mating partner can become difficult when the available parameters of a signal are not positively correlated. Rational choice theory predicts that animals assign each signal a fixed value on a single dimension. The probability of choosing one signal over the other should be a monotonic function of the respective values and result in transitive choices. A violation of transitivity in choice behavior would suggest comparative rather than absolute decision making. Here, we tested the transitivity of preferences of female crickets for male calling songs. We conducted a series of binary choice experiments and compared their outcome to female preferences measured in no-choice experiments. To test transitivity, every choice pair had to differ in 2 parameters of the calling song. The parameter pairs used were 1) pulse rate and sound intensity, 2) chirp rate and sound intensity, and 3) pulse rate and chirp rate. The results revealed that females acted transitively if chirp rate and sound intensity or pulse rate and chirp rate of the patterns were varied. But females violated transitivity if pulse rate and sound intensity of signals differed as they mostly chose the louder pattern, although it was less attractive in the no-choice situation. This implies that sound intensity was weighted differently by females in the decision process in no-choice and choice experiments. The violation of transitivity suggests a comparative evaluation of available signals by female crickets.
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  • 59
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  • 69
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Description: Ian Crawford , Martin Elvis and James Carpenter summarize an RAS Specialist Discussion Meeting which examined how science will benefit from the use of extraterrestrial resources.
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    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Description: Before they could join the RAS, many women were influential members of amateur astronomical societies across the country, as Allan Chapman explains.
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  • 75
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    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Description: Don Kurtz , Simon Jeffrey and Conny Aerts describe discoveries in the new era of precision asteroseismology.
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    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Description: A&G is branching out with an online platform where RAS Fellows can write about their activities, news and events, reports Sue Bowler .
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    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Description: COPERNICUS/ESA/PPO.LABS/NORUT/COMET-SEOM INSARAP STUDY In this issue's cover feature, Tim J Wright discusses the earthquake deformation cycle and seismic hazard in the continents – the 2015 Bullerwell Lecture.
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    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Description: The National Astronomy Meeting is in its 25th year. Ken Pounds looks back at how it started and how it has evolved.
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Ecological conditions are expected to have an important influence on individuals’ investment in cooperative care. However, the nature of their effects is unclear: both favorable and unfavorable conditions have been found to promote helping behavior. Recent studies provide a possible explanation for these conflicting results by suggesting that increased ecological variability, rather than changes in mean conditions, promote cooperative care. However, no study has tested whether increased ecological variability promotes individual-level helping behavior or the mechanisms involved. We test this hypothesis in a long-term study population of the cooperatively breeding banded mongoose, Mungos mungo , using 14 years of behavioral and meteorological data to explore how the mean and variability of ecological conditions influence individual behavior, body condition, and survival. Female body condition was more sensitive to changes in rainfall leading to poorer female survival and pronounced male-biased group compositions after periods of high rainfall variability. After such periods, older males invested more in helping behavior, potentially because they had fewer mating opportunities. These results provide the first empirical evidence for increased individual helping effort in more variable ecological conditions and suggest this arises because of individual differences in the effect of ecological conditions on body condition and survival, and the knock-on effect on social group composition. Individual differences in sensitivity to environmental variability, and the impacts this has on the internal structure and composition of animal groups, can exert a strong influence on the evolution and maintenance of social behaviors, such as cooperative care.
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Reduction of predation risk represents the most likely explanation for the evolution of group-living among the anthropoid primates. Obligate sociality leads to increased competition for resources, meaning that animals may face a trade-off between safe positions within the troop and increased foraging efficiency. Dominance has been proposed to be a major factor influencing spatial position within primate troops, but it is also possible that animals can improve their spatial position using social strategies, such as grooming. In many species, dominance rank and social preference (as expressed through grooming) are confounded. In our study population of vervet monkeys, however, dominance does not underpin social preference, enabling us to test whether 1) more sociable vervets experience reduced exposure to predation risk, as indexed by vigilance, and 2) that dominant animals accepted increased risk in order to forage at the front of the troop. We collected spatially explicit data on the individual locations of members of 2 troops at predetermined times over a 4-month period. We constructed bounded Voronoi tessellations for each temporal snapshot, with the area of each animal’s "tile" identifying its "domain of danger." We also collected data on time spent vigilant and foraging, dominance rank, and grooming behavior. We found no effect of dominance, but animals with larger grooming networks were less exposed to predation risk, from which they benefitted through both reduced vigilance and increased foraging time. We interpret these results in the light of current debates about the ways in which sociality affects fitness.
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: The high frequency of same-sex sexual behaviors (SSB) in free-ranging animals is an evolutionary puzzle because fitness benefits are often unclear in an evolutionary context. Moreover, the physiological and genetic underpinnings of SSB remain unclear. We exploited an extraordinary natural experiment to examine the impact of environmental factors (local sex ratio [SR]) and testosterone (T) levels on SSB in a dense population of Hermann’s tortoises monitored for 7 years. Under the combination of high density and extremely skewed SR (~50 females, 〉1000 males), males courted and mounted other males more frequently than females. They even exhibited extravagant sexual behaviors, attempting to copulate with dead conspecifics, empty shells, and stones. T levels remained within the species’ normal range of variation. SSB was not observed in other populations where SR is not, or less skewed, and where density is lower. This study reports the first natural example of a "prison effect," whereby a high population density combined with female deprivation triggered SSB as a mere outlet of sexual stimulation. More generally, it supports the hypothesis that SSB can be a nonadaptive consequence of unusual proximate factors rather than reflecting physiological disorders.
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: In animal contests, individuals respond plastically to the phenotypes of the opponents that they confront. These "opponent"—or "indirect"—effects are often repeatable, for example, certain opponents consistently elicit more or less aggressiveness in others. "Personality" (repeatable among-individual variation in behavior) has been proposed as an important source of indirect effects. Here, we repeatedly assayed aggressiveness of wild-caught adult male field crickets Gryllus campestris in staged dyadic fights, measuring aggressiveness of both contestants. Measurements of their personality in nonsocial contexts (activity and exploration behavior) enabled us to ask whether personality caused indirect effects on aggressiveness. Activity, exploration, and aggressiveness were positively associated into a behavioral syndrome eliciting aggressiveness in conspecifics, providing direct evidence for the role of personality in causing indirect effects. Our findings imply that a multivariate view of phenotypes that includes indirect effects greatly improves our ability to understand the ecology and evolution of behavior.
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    Topics: Biology
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Individuals that retain their former partners often perform better than conspecifics that switch partners. This may be due to high-quality individuals being more faithful to their partners and more productive. Investigations of the fitness benefits of mate retention that also control for potential confounding effects of individuals are scarce. We studied the influence of mate retention and breeding experience on breeding performance of the hair-crested drongo ( Dicrurus hottentottus ) by carrying out both cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses. Pairs with longer pair-bond duration did not fledge more young or fledglings of better body condition nor did they produce more or better fledglings than newly formed pairs consisting of at least 1 experienced breeder, that is, individuals that had bred before. Individuals produced fewer fledglings when they were paired with an inexperienced breeder, especially when females were paired with inexperienced males. Although clutch size was not affected by mate retention or breeding experience, pairs consisting of inexperienced breeder(s) had a relatively higher predation rate of eggs and/or nestlings because they may be less effective in nest defense. The onset of breeding was advanced in the year following mate retention, but not in the second year thereafter, when pairs still remained together. Furthermore, only the breeding experience of the male determined the onset of breeding: Pairs consisting of inexperienced males bred later in the season. Our results suggest that breeding experience, and particularly the breeding experience of the male, but not mate retention, is important in determining the breeding performance of hair-crested drongos.
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  • 86
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Print ISSN: 1366-8781
    Electronic ISSN: 1468-4004
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 87
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Description: The Royal Astronomical Society now has two medals that honour excellent research in outreach and historical science. Fittingly in this centenary year, both are named after distinguished women, reports Sue Bowler .
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  • 88
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Description: Steve Bush , curriculum leader for science at Sackville School in West Sussex, was awarded the 2016 RAS Patrick Moore Medal for his contribution to astronomy education. But, as he explains here, it was only chance that led him to astronomy.
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  • 89
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Description: Richard McKim gives an overview of the rather different role of women in the early British Astronomical Association.
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  • 90
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 91
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 92
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 93
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 94
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 95
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 96
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 97
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 98
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: The astonishing diversity of floral form in angiosperm plants is driven in large part by preferences of pollinators for various floral traits, including learned preferences. Remarkably, almost all of a vast literature on learning and memory in pollinators relates to nectar as a reward, even though bees and many flies, beetles, and butterflies must collect pollen. In this study, we asked if bees formed preferences for plant species from which pollen had been collected successfully. Using absolute conditioning, we gave pollen foraging bees experience with plant species that offered only pollen rewards. Naive bees generally showed modest preferences, whereas experienced bees adopted strong preferences for those species over alternative species not previously experienced. Learned preferences were retained for at least 24h, consistent with preferences learned with nectar rewards. These experience-mediated changes in preference raised the possibility that bees formed associations between particular floral features and pollen rewards. We therefore asked if learned preferences required that bees successfully collect pollen. Using differential conditioning, we determined that learned preferences were strongly influenced by receipt of a pollen reward. In a final experiment, we characterized the importance of 2 floral features, the corolla and the anther, in the expression of learned preferences. Although experience altered responses to both floral parts, responses to anthers were influenced more strongly. We discuss recent evidence in the literature for associative learning with pollen rewards and propose that learned preferences in the context of pollen collection have played an important role in floral display evolution.
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  • 100
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: The jumping spider genus Myrmarachne (Salticidae) consists of over 200 species of morphologically accurate ant mimics, enabling Myrmarachne to evade ant-averse predators that confuse the spiders with ants (Batesian mimicry). A conspicuous but untested trait of Myrmarachne , which is frequently mentioned in the literature, is locomotory mimicry. For these spiders, locomotion that is more ant like than salticid like may be an integral part of the suite of mimetic signals. We quantified the locomotory pattern of several species of non-ant-like salticids, Myrmarachne , and ants from Australia. We found that the locomotion of the mimics generally resembles that of ants, but not of other salticids. To tease out the effects of locomotion from those based on morphology, ant-eating salticids as visual predators were presented with 3D animations of ant-like salticids walking either in ant or in salticid fashion. Ant-eating salticids spent significantly longer looking at the stimulus with ant-like movement and were significantly more likely to visually track and stalk the stimulus with ant-like movement. Overall, our results suggest that there is selection pressure on Myrmarachne for increased resemblance to a model by locomotor mimicry, despite the associated costs when faced with ant-eating predators.
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    Topics: Biology
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