Synopsis Behavioral, hormonal, and genetic processes interact reciprocally, and differentially affect behavior depending on ecological and social contexts. When individual differences are favored either between or within environments, developmental plasticity would be expected. Parental effects provide a rich source for phenotypic plasticity, including anatomical, physiological, and behavioral traits, because parents respond to dynamic cues in their environment and can, in turn, influence offspring accordingly. Because these inter-generational changes are plastic, parents can respond rapidly to changing environments and produce offspring whose phenotypes are well suited for current conditions more quickly than occurs with changes based on e...
In nature, species are constantly challenged by biotic and abiotic factors. In order to thrive, indi...
Much work has shown that the environment can induce non-genetic changes in phenotype that span multi...
There is growing evidence that the environment experienced by one generation can influence phenotype...
Synopsis Behavioral, hormonal, and genetic processes interact reciprocally, and differentially affec...
Behavior is one of the most immediate and effective ways to respond to and cope with environmental a...
Phenotypic plasticity—one individual’s capacity for phenotypic variation under different environment...
There is increasing attention for integrating mechanistic and functional approaches to the study of ...
Plasticity is assumed to enable beneficial adjustment to the environment. In this context, 4 develop...
Controlled laboratory experiments find there is normal variation in maternal care that regulates the...
In fluctuating environments, mothers may enhance the fitness of their offspring by adjusting offspri...
One of the outstanding challenges for evolutionary biologists is to understand how developmental pla...
Long-term studies of wild animals provide the opportunity to investigate how phenotypic plasticity i...
This work describes the most studied mechanisms which could be classified as maternal effects. Here ...
The evolution of adaptive phenotypic plasticity relies on the presence of cues that enable organisms...
Individual differences in plasticity have been classically framed as genotype-by-environment interac...
In nature, species are constantly challenged by biotic and abiotic factors. In order to thrive, indi...
Much work has shown that the environment can induce non-genetic changes in phenotype that span multi...
There is growing evidence that the environment experienced by one generation can influence phenotype...
Synopsis Behavioral, hormonal, and genetic processes interact reciprocally, and differentially affec...
Behavior is one of the most immediate and effective ways to respond to and cope with environmental a...
Phenotypic plasticity—one individual’s capacity for phenotypic variation under different environment...
There is increasing attention for integrating mechanistic and functional approaches to the study of ...
Plasticity is assumed to enable beneficial adjustment to the environment. In this context, 4 develop...
Controlled laboratory experiments find there is normal variation in maternal care that regulates the...
In fluctuating environments, mothers may enhance the fitness of their offspring by adjusting offspri...
One of the outstanding challenges for evolutionary biologists is to understand how developmental pla...
Long-term studies of wild animals provide the opportunity to investigate how phenotypic plasticity i...
This work describes the most studied mechanisms which could be classified as maternal effects. Here ...
The evolution of adaptive phenotypic plasticity relies on the presence of cues that enable organisms...
Individual differences in plasticity have been classically framed as genotype-by-environment interac...
In nature, species are constantly challenged by biotic and abiotic factors. In order to thrive, indi...
Much work has shown that the environment can induce non-genetic changes in phenotype that span multi...
There is growing evidence that the environment experienced by one generation can influence phenotype...