The brain and the immune system are both energetically demanding organs, and when natural selection favors increased investment into one, then the size or performance of the other should be reduced. While comparative analyses have attempted to test this potential evolutionary trade-off, the results remain inconclusive. To test this hypothesis, we compared the tissue graft rejection (an assay for measuring innate and acquired immune responses) in guppies (Poecilia reticulata) artificially selected for large and small relative brain size. Individual scales were transplanted between pairs of fish, creating reciprocal allografts, and the rejection reaction was scored over eight days (before acquired immunity develops). Acquired immune responses...
There is considerable diversity in brain size within and among species, and substantial dispute over...
Predation is a near ubiquitous factor of nature and a powerful selective force on prey. Moreover, it...
It has become increasingly clear that a larger brain can confer cognitive benefits. Yet not all of t...
The brain and the immune system are both energetically demanding organs, and when natural selection ...
SummaryThe large variation in brain size that exists in the animal kingdom has been suggested to hav...
SummaryAn artificial selection experiment demonstrates that large-brained guppies learn better, but ...
Vertebrates exhibit extensive variation in relative brain size. It has long been assumed that this v...
Neurons are the basic computational units of the brain, but brain size is the predominant surrogate ...
The vertebrate brain shows an extremely conserved layout across taxa. Still, the relative sizes of s...
Large brains are thought to result from selection for cognitive benefits, but how enhanced cognition...
Natural selection is often invoked to explain differences in brain size among vertebrates. However, ...
Vertebrate brain size is remarkably variable at all taxonomic levels. Brains of mammals forexample, ...
One key hypothesis in the study of brain size evolution is the expensive tissue hypothesis; the idea...
There is considerable diversity in brain size within and among species, and substantial dispute over...
Predation is a near ubiquitous factor of nature and a powerful selective force on prey. Moreover, it...
It has become increasingly clear that a larger brain can confer cognitive benefits. Yet not all of t...
The brain and the immune system are both energetically demanding organs, and when natural selection ...
SummaryThe large variation in brain size that exists in the animal kingdom has been suggested to hav...
SummaryAn artificial selection experiment demonstrates that large-brained guppies learn better, but ...
Vertebrates exhibit extensive variation in relative brain size. It has long been assumed that this v...
Neurons are the basic computational units of the brain, but brain size is the predominant surrogate ...
The vertebrate brain shows an extremely conserved layout across taxa. Still, the relative sizes of s...
Large brains are thought to result from selection for cognitive benefits, but how enhanced cognition...
Natural selection is often invoked to explain differences in brain size among vertebrates. However, ...
Vertebrate brain size is remarkably variable at all taxonomic levels. Brains of mammals forexample, ...
One key hypothesis in the study of brain size evolution is the expensive tissue hypothesis; the idea...
There is considerable diversity in brain size within and among species, and substantial dispute over...
Predation is a near ubiquitous factor of nature and a powerful selective force on prey. Moreover, it...
It has become increasingly clear that a larger brain can confer cognitive benefits. Yet not all of t...