1. Repeatability represents a key parameter in ecological and evolutionary research. Repeatability is underpinned by developmental plasticity and genetic variation but may become biased upwards by repeatable differences in environments to which individuals respond plastically. The extent of upward bias caused by the latter mechanism (causing “pseudo-repeatability”) is important yet rarely investigated in ecological research. 2. We repeatedly assayed a key behaviour (flight initiation distance) affecting longevity in a wild cricket population (Gryllus campestris). We used naturally moving, translocated, and forced-stationary individuals to study bias in repeatability caused by spatial variability in environmental conditions. 3. Our experimen...
Animal personality implies limited behavioral plasticity and behavioral traits which are correlated ...
The evolutionary trajectories associated with demographic, genetic and spatial disequilibrium have b...
1. Sexual signals may be acquired or lost over evolutionary time, and are tempered in their exaggera...
1. Repeatability represents a key parameter in ecological and evolutionary research. Repeatability i...
The study of adaptive individual behavior (“animal personality”) focuses on whether individuals diff...
Evolutionary ecologists increasingly study reaction norms that are expressed repeatedly within the s...
Quantifying consistent differences in behaviour among individuals is vital to understanding the ecol...
PublishedJOURNAL ARTICLEInvestigating patterns of among and within-individual trait variation in pop...
This article investigates inter-individual repeatability in distance moved in an open-field test for...
There is increasing interest in individual differences in animal behaviour. Recent research now sugg...
The social environment is expected to have substantial effects on behavior, and as a consequence its...
Natural Environment Research Council. Grant Numbers: NE/H02249X/1, NE/H02364X/1Peer reviewedPublishe...
A fundamental goal of evolutionary ecology is to identify the sources underlying trait variation on ...
Evidence accumulates that dispersal is correlated with individual behavioural phenotype ('dispersal ...
The pace-of-life syndrome (POLS) hypothesis predicts associations between life-history and 'risky' b...
Animal personality implies limited behavioral plasticity and behavioral traits which are correlated ...
The evolutionary trajectories associated with demographic, genetic and spatial disequilibrium have b...
1. Sexual signals may be acquired or lost over evolutionary time, and are tempered in their exaggera...
1. Repeatability represents a key parameter in ecological and evolutionary research. Repeatability i...
The study of adaptive individual behavior (“animal personality”) focuses on whether individuals diff...
Evolutionary ecologists increasingly study reaction norms that are expressed repeatedly within the s...
Quantifying consistent differences in behaviour among individuals is vital to understanding the ecol...
PublishedJOURNAL ARTICLEInvestigating patterns of among and within-individual trait variation in pop...
This article investigates inter-individual repeatability in distance moved in an open-field test for...
There is increasing interest in individual differences in animal behaviour. Recent research now sugg...
The social environment is expected to have substantial effects on behavior, and as a consequence its...
Natural Environment Research Council. Grant Numbers: NE/H02249X/1, NE/H02364X/1Peer reviewedPublishe...
A fundamental goal of evolutionary ecology is to identify the sources underlying trait variation on ...
Evidence accumulates that dispersal is correlated with individual behavioural phenotype ('dispersal ...
The pace-of-life syndrome (POLS) hypothesis predicts associations between life-history and 'risky' b...
Animal personality implies limited behavioral plasticity and behavioral traits which are correlated ...
The evolutionary trajectories associated with demographic, genetic and spatial disequilibrium have b...
1. Sexual signals may be acquired or lost over evolutionary time, and are tempered in their exaggera...