Long-term studies of individual animals in nature contribute disproportionately to our understanding of the principles of ecology and evolution. Such field studies can benefit greatly from integrating the methods of molecular genetics with traditional approaches. Even though molecular genetic tools are particularly valuable for species that are difficult to observe directly, they have not been widely adopted. Here, we used molecular genetic techniques in a 10-year radio-telemetric investigation of the western diamond-backed rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox) for an analysis of its mating system and to measure sexual selection. Specifically, we used microsatellite markers to genotype 299 individuals, including neonates from litters of focal female...
DNA-based genetic techniques can be used to identify individuals in wild populations whose ancestry ...
Hybrid zones provide valuable opportunities to understand the genomic mechanisms that promote specia...
It is now evident that the genetic mating system can be very different to the observed mating system...
I combined long-term ecological data and population genetic data using microsatellite DNA markers to...
Decades of research on sexual selection have demonstrated that 'conventional' Darwinian sex roles ar...
Investigating secondary contact of historically isolated lineages can provide insight into how selec...
We developed novel microsatellite markers for the Crotalus atrox and Crotalus scutulatus species of ...
,We used 10 microsatellite loci to identify the sires of 375 hatchlings from 34 clutches with known ...
Threatened across much of their range, timber rattlesnakes (Crotalus horridus) exhibit patterns in m...
Individuals of many species show high levels of fidelity to natal populations, often due to reliance...
Females of many vertebrate species have the capacity to store sperm within their reproductive tracts...
Sexual selection and reproductive strategies affect individual fitness and population genetic divers...
The Mojave rattlesnake (Crotalus scutulatus) inhabits deserts and arid grasslands of the western Uni...
Sexual selection and reproductive strategies affect individual fitness and population genetic divers...
Mating behavior in animals can be understood as a sequence of events that begins with individuals en...
DNA-based genetic techniques can be used to identify individuals in wild populations whose ancestry ...
Hybrid zones provide valuable opportunities to understand the genomic mechanisms that promote specia...
It is now evident that the genetic mating system can be very different to the observed mating system...
I combined long-term ecological data and population genetic data using microsatellite DNA markers to...
Decades of research on sexual selection have demonstrated that 'conventional' Darwinian sex roles ar...
Investigating secondary contact of historically isolated lineages can provide insight into how selec...
We developed novel microsatellite markers for the Crotalus atrox and Crotalus scutulatus species of ...
,We used 10 microsatellite loci to identify the sires of 375 hatchlings from 34 clutches with known ...
Threatened across much of their range, timber rattlesnakes (Crotalus horridus) exhibit patterns in m...
Individuals of many species show high levels of fidelity to natal populations, often due to reliance...
Females of many vertebrate species have the capacity to store sperm within their reproductive tracts...
Sexual selection and reproductive strategies affect individual fitness and population genetic divers...
The Mojave rattlesnake (Crotalus scutulatus) inhabits deserts and arid grasslands of the western Uni...
Sexual selection and reproductive strategies affect individual fitness and population genetic divers...
Mating behavior in animals can be understood as a sequence of events that begins with individuals en...
DNA-based genetic techniques can be used to identify individuals in wild populations whose ancestry ...
Hybrid zones provide valuable opportunities to understand the genomic mechanisms that promote specia...
It is now evident that the genetic mating system can be very different to the observed mating system...