1. Aggression can be beneficial in competitive environments if aggressive individuals are more likely to access resources than non-aggressive individuals. However, variation in aggressive behaviour persists within populations, suggesting that high levels of aggression might not always be favoured. 2. The goal of this study was to experimentally assess the effects of population density and phenotypic frequency on selection on aggression in a competitive environment. 3. We compared survival of two strains of Drosophila melanogaster that differ in aggression across three density treatments and five frequency treatments (single strain groups, equal numbers of each strain, and strains mixed at 3:1 and 1:3 ratios) during a period of limited resou...
Deleterious alleles are constantly introduced into populations due to mutation. In subdivided popula...
Theories of density-dependent natural selection state that at extreme population densities evolution...
In this study, we investigate the effect of local adaptation to developmental density on male mating...
1. Aggression can be beneficial in competitive environments if aggressive individuals are more likel...
Aggressive behavior is common in many species and is often adaptive because it enables individuals t...
The expression of aggression depends not only on the direct genetic effects (DGEs) of an individual'...
Theories of density-dependent natural selection predict that evolution should favor those genotypes ...
We have examined the effects of density and frequency in the larval competition of Drosophila melano...
Across the animal kingdom, competition for reproductive resources often results in intra-sexual aggr...
Individuals are not merely subject to their social environments; they choose and create them, throug...
Evolutionary ecologists often seek to identify the mechanisms maintaining intraspecific variation. I...
1. Population density affects individual performance, though its effects are often mixed. For sessil...
In the Drosophila literature, selection for faster development and selection for adapting to high de...
Determining how adaptive evolution can be coupled to ecological processes is key for developing a mo...
Deleterious alleles are constantly introduced into populations due to mutation. In subdivided popula...
Theories of density-dependent natural selection state that at extreme population densities evolution...
In this study, we investigate the effect of local adaptation to developmental density on male mating...
1. Aggression can be beneficial in competitive environments if aggressive individuals are more likel...
Aggressive behavior is common in many species and is often adaptive because it enables individuals t...
The expression of aggression depends not only on the direct genetic effects (DGEs) of an individual'...
Theories of density-dependent natural selection predict that evolution should favor those genotypes ...
We have examined the effects of density and frequency in the larval competition of Drosophila melano...
Across the animal kingdom, competition for reproductive resources often results in intra-sexual aggr...
Individuals are not merely subject to their social environments; they choose and create them, throug...
Evolutionary ecologists often seek to identify the mechanisms maintaining intraspecific variation. I...
1. Population density affects individual performance, though its effects are often mixed. For sessil...
In the Drosophila literature, selection for faster development and selection for adapting to high de...
Determining how adaptive evolution can be coupled to ecological processes is key for developing a mo...
Deleterious alleles are constantly introduced into populations due to mutation. In subdivided popula...
Theories of density-dependent natural selection state that at extreme population densities evolution...
In this study, we investigate the effect of local adaptation to developmental density on male mating...