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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Amsterdam : Elsevier
    Animal Behaviour 47 (1994), S. 943-957 
    ISSN: 0003-3472
    Source: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002
    Topics: Biology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Print ISSN: 1045-2249
    Electronic ISSN: 1465-7279
    Topics: Biology
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: To study biologically relevant variation in visual signals, these need to be assessed in relation to the sensory abilities of receivers. For the study of colors, reflectance spectrometry has been the method of choice, but analyses of reflectance spectra present challenges that hamper our understanding of color variation. Among these are computing meaningful color variables and interpreting their biological relevance. Here, we suggest how to overcome the limitations of commonly used approaches. We describe how to use psychophysical visual models to assess chromatic variation in the visual space of animals. This approach consists of 1) obtaining cone quantum catches from reflectance spectra, 2) transforming these into visual space coordinates where Euclidean distances reflect perceptual distances, 3) summarizing variation in visual space using principal component analysis (PCA) maintaining original perceptual units, and 4) interpreting the axes of chromatic variation (PC) based on their loadings and relative and absolute levels of chromatic variation. We illustrate this approach by comparing it to traditional color indices (hue and saturation) and PCA computed directly on reflectance spectra, using 2 examples: 1) determining the biological relevance of correlations between bill coloration and male quality in mallards and 2) assessing the success of experimental color manipulations in blue tits. In both cases, re-analyzing the data suggests different interpretations. This approach provides a simple way of objectively summarizing chromatic variation and interpreting the magnitude of biologically relevant effects. We provide R scripts to carry out computations and recommendations on how to report results to make data comparable between studies.
    Print ISSN: 1045-2249
    Electronic ISSN: 1465-7279
    Topics: Biology
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2011-06-13
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2015-09-15
    Description: In territorial species, at least 1 of the 2 individuals involved in an extrapair mating has to leave its territory in order to copulate with the extrapair partner. However, data on extraterritorial forays are difficult and time-consuming to acquire, and extensive datasets on foraying behavior are rare. Here, we use an automated recording system to investigate forays of individual blue tits ( Cyanistes caeruleus ) to other pair’s nest-boxes during early spring, when extrapair matings occur. The study has 3 aims. 1) To describe daily and seasonal variation in the frequency of foraying behavior. 2) To investigate which individuals perform forays. 3) To investigate whether male and female visits to other pair’s nest-boxes predict the occurrence of extrapair paternity. We find that males visited foreign nest-boxes more frequently than females, and that the majority of visits occurred in the morning hours, but not around dawn. Male visits to a foreign nest-box were unrelated to the social and the visited females’ fertile period. Male body size, but not age predicted the occurrence of forays. Males that forayed were more likely to sire extrapair offspring with the female they visited compared with nonvisiting males. Whether males copulate during such visits or whether females seek extrapair copulations from visiting males remains unknown. However, male forays to a foreign nest-box coincided with the presence of the resident female at the same nest-box more often than expected by chance. This indicates that visits to foreign nest-boxes could be an opportunity for extrapair mate assessment or extrapair copulations.
    Print ISSN: 1045-2249
    Electronic ISSN: 1465-7279
    Topics: Biology
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2015-01-30
    Print ISSN: 1045-2249
    Electronic ISSN: 1465-7279
    Topics: Biology
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2015-01-30
    Description: Incubation is energetically demanding, but it is debated whether these demands constrain incubation-scheduling (i.e., the length, constancy, and timing of incubation bouts) in cases where both parents incubate. Using 2 methods, we experimentally reduced the energetic demands of incubation in the semipalmated sandpiper, a biparental shorebird breeding in the harsh conditions of the high Arctic. First, we decreased the demands of incubation for 1 parent only by exchanging 1 of the 4 eggs for an artificial egg that heated up when the focal bird incubated. Second, we reanalyzed the data from the only published experimental study that has explicitly tested energetic constraints on incubation-scheduling in a biparentally incubating species ( Cresswell et al. 2003 ). In this experiment, the energetic demands of incubation were decreased for both parents by insulating the nest cup. We expected that the treated birds, in both experiments, would change the length of their incubation bouts, if biparental incubation-scheduling is energetically constrained. However, we found no evidence that heating or insulation of the nest affected the length of incubation bouts: the combined effect of both experiments was an increase in bout length of 3.6min (95% CI: –33 to 40), which is equivalent to a 0.5% increase in the length of the average incubation bout. These results demonstrate that the observed biparental incubation-scheduling in semipalmated sandpipers is not primarily driven by energetic constraints and therefore by the state of the incubating bird, implying that we still do not understand the factors driving biparental incubation-scheduling.
    Print ISSN: 1045-2249
    Electronic ISSN: 1465-7279
    Topics: Biology
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  • 8
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-01-30
    Description: Proteomics refers to the study of the protein complement expressed by a genome and aims to understand protein expression, regulation, function, and interactions. Expression proteomics affords an unbiased image of the proteins potentially associated with or responsible for specific behaviors without requiring previous knowledge of the nature of these molecules. Recent technological advances in mass spectrometry, bioinformatics, and genome sequencing have made proteomics accessible to the study of non-model species and to different fields of biological research. In this review, we call the attention of behavioral ecologists to proteomic technologies and we highlight the great potential they offer for interdisciplinary research by 1) pointing out the advantages of the large-scale study of proteins, 2) suggesting research topics best tackled by this approach, and 3) indicating some of the techniques available for the identification and quantification of proteins. We also show how proteomic approaches can help formulate and test hypotheses on the mechanisms underlying behavior and develop experimental tools which allow the manipulation of behavior.
    Print ISSN: 1045-2249
    Electronic ISSN: 1465-7279
    Topics: Biology
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2011-06-30
    Description: In many species that form socially monogamous pair bonds, a considerable proportion of the offspring is sired by extrapair males. This observation has remained a puzzle for evolutionary biologists: although mating outside the pair bond can obviously increase the offspring production of males, the benefits of such behavior to females are less clear, yet females are known to actively solicit extrapair copulations. For more than two decades adaptionist explanations have dominated the discussions, yet remain controversial, and genetic constraint arguments have been dismissed without much consideration. An intriguing but still untested hypothesis states that extrapair mating behavior by females may be affected by the same genetic variants (alleles) as extrapair mating behavior by males, such that the female behavior could evolve through indirect selection on the male behavior. Here we show that in the socially monogamous zebra finch, individual differences in extrapair mating behavior have a hereditary component. Intriguingly, this genetic basis is shared between the sexes, as shown by a strong genetic correlation between male and female measurements of extrapair mating behavior. Hence, positive selection on males to sire extrapair young will lead to increased extrapair mating by females as a correlated evolutionary response. This behavior leads to a fundamentally different view of female extrapair mating: it may exist even if females obtain no net benefit from it, simply because the corresponding alleles were positively selected in the male ancestors.
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2013-12-13
    Description: In biparental species, parents may be in conflict over how much they invest into their offspring. To understand this conflict, parental care needs to be accurately measured, something rarely done. Here, we quantitatively describe the outcome of parental conflict in terms of quality, amount, and timing of incubation throughout the 21-day incubation period in a population of semipalmated sandpipers ( Calidris pusilla ) breeding under continuous daylight in the high Arctic. Incubation quality, measured by egg temperature and incubation constancy, showed no marked difference between the sexes. The amount of incubation, measured as length of incubation bouts, was on average 51min longer per bout for females (11.5h) than for males (10.7h), at first glance suggesting that females invested more than males. However, this difference may have been offset by sex differences in the timing of incubation; females were more often off nest during the warmer period of the day, when foraging conditions were presumably better. Overall, the daily timing of incubation shifted over the incubation period (e.g., for female incubation from evening–night to night–morning) and over the season, but varied considerably among pairs. At one extreme, pairs shared the amount of incubation equally, but one parent always incubated during the colder part of the day; at the other extreme, pairs shifted the start of incubation bouts between days so that each parent experienced similar conditions across the incubation period. Our results highlight how the simultaneous consideration of different aspects of care across time allows sex-specific investment to be more accurately quantified.
    Print ISSN: 1045-2249
    Electronic ISSN: 1465-7279
    Topics: Biology
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