Sex ratio theory offers excellent opportunities to examine the extent to which individuals adaptively adjust their behavior in response to local conditions. Hamilton's theory of local mate competition, which predicts female-biased sex ratios in structured populations, has been extended in numerous directions to predict individual behavior in response to factors such as relative fecundity, time of oviposition, and relatedness between cofoundresses and between mates. These extended models assume that foundresses use different sources of information, and they have generally been untested or have only been tested in the laboratory. We use microsatellite markers to describe the wild oviposition behavior of individual foundresses in natural popul...
Sex allocation is an important reproductive decision for parents. However, it is often assumed that ...
Species recognition is an important aspect of an organism's biology. Here, we consider how parasitoi...
Abstract Hamilton's local mate competition theory provided an explanation for extraordinary female‐b...
Sex ratio theory offers excellent opportunities to examine the extent to which individuals adaptivel...
Sex ratio theory offers excellent opportunities to examine the extent to which individuals adaptivel...
Sex allocation theory offers excellent opportunities for studying the precision of adaptation. One o...
Optimality theory of sex allocation in structured populations has proved remarkably successful in ex...
Sex ratio theory allows unparalleled opportunities for testing how well animal behavior can be predi...
Sex ratio theory has proved remarkably useful in testing the adaptive nature of animal behavior. A p...
Sex ratio theory allows unparalleled opportunities for testing how well animal behavior can be predi...
The parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis has been used extensively in sex allocation research. Althoug...
The parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis has been used extensively in sex allocation research. Althoug...
Sex ratio theory predicts that in haplodiploid species, females should lay a relatively more female-...
The parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis has been used extensively in sex allocation research. Althoug...
Sex ratio theory provides a clear and simple way to test if nonsocial haplodiploid wasps can discrim...
Sex allocation is an important reproductive decision for parents. However, it is often assumed that ...
Species recognition is an important aspect of an organism's biology. Here, we consider how parasitoi...
Abstract Hamilton's local mate competition theory provided an explanation for extraordinary female‐b...
Sex ratio theory offers excellent opportunities to examine the extent to which individuals adaptivel...
Sex ratio theory offers excellent opportunities to examine the extent to which individuals adaptivel...
Sex allocation theory offers excellent opportunities for studying the precision of adaptation. One o...
Optimality theory of sex allocation in structured populations has proved remarkably successful in ex...
Sex ratio theory allows unparalleled opportunities for testing how well animal behavior can be predi...
Sex ratio theory has proved remarkably useful in testing the adaptive nature of animal behavior. A p...
Sex ratio theory allows unparalleled opportunities for testing how well animal behavior can be predi...
The parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis has been used extensively in sex allocation research. Althoug...
The parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis has been used extensively in sex allocation research. Althoug...
Sex ratio theory predicts that in haplodiploid species, females should lay a relatively more female-...
The parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis has been used extensively in sex allocation research. Althoug...
Sex ratio theory provides a clear and simple way to test if nonsocial haplodiploid wasps can discrim...
Sex allocation is an important reproductive decision for parents. However, it is often assumed that ...
Species recognition is an important aspect of an organism's biology. Here, we consider how parasitoi...
Abstract Hamilton's local mate competition theory provided an explanation for extraordinary female‐b...