Trophic egg-laying - wherein mothers provide non-developing eggs for offspring to eat - has attracted much empirical attention to diverse taxa (e.g. amphibians, non-social and eusocial insects, fish, and marine gastropods). However, there has been been only a limited exchange of ideas among studies of different taxa. We advocate a unified approach to the study of trophic eggs within an evolutionary ecological framework. In this paper, we stress the importance of elucidating the adaptive function of trophic eggs through explicit hypothesis testing, and our primary objective is to outline key experiments that can test adaptive and functional hypotheses. Currently, some cases of hypothesized trophic eggs may simply represent offspring consumpt...
Filial cannibalism occurs in many animal species ranging from insects to mammals, and is especially ...
Insect parental care is extensive and varied, but its life history implications have never been comp...
All organisms live in environments that are variable across space and time. Variation in selection a...
A large proportion of ladybird beetle (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) eggs are apparently infertile-they...
Communal egg-laying is widespread among animals, occurring in insects, mollusks, fish, amphibians, r...
Communal egg-laying is widespread among animals, occurring in insects, mollusks, fish, amphibians, r...
The mechanism that facilitates the evolution of maternal care is ambiguous in egg-laying terrestrial...
Parental care is extremely diverse but, despite much research, why parental care evolves is poorly u...
The mechanism which facilitates the evolution of maternal care is ambiguous in egg-laying terrestria...
<p>The evolution of reproductive strategies involves a complex calculus of costs and benefits to bot...
Parental care, mating dynamics and life history co-evolve. Understanding the diversity of reproducti...
Individuals within complex social groups often experience reduced reproduction owing to coercive or ...
Synopsis Most animals begin life in eggs, protected and constrained by a capsule, shell, or other ba...
Understanding what regulates population sizes of organisms with complex life cycles is challenging b...
Parental care and filial cannibalism (the consumption of one's own offspring) co-occur in many anima...
Filial cannibalism occurs in many animal species ranging from insects to mammals, and is especially ...
Insect parental care is extensive and varied, but its life history implications have never been comp...
All organisms live in environments that are variable across space and time. Variation in selection a...
A large proportion of ladybird beetle (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) eggs are apparently infertile-they...
Communal egg-laying is widespread among animals, occurring in insects, mollusks, fish, amphibians, r...
Communal egg-laying is widespread among animals, occurring in insects, mollusks, fish, amphibians, r...
The mechanism that facilitates the evolution of maternal care is ambiguous in egg-laying terrestrial...
Parental care is extremely diverse but, despite much research, why parental care evolves is poorly u...
The mechanism which facilitates the evolution of maternal care is ambiguous in egg-laying terrestria...
<p>The evolution of reproductive strategies involves a complex calculus of costs and benefits to bot...
Parental care, mating dynamics and life history co-evolve. Understanding the diversity of reproducti...
Individuals within complex social groups often experience reduced reproduction owing to coercive or ...
Synopsis Most animals begin life in eggs, protected and constrained by a capsule, shell, or other ba...
Understanding what regulates population sizes of organisms with complex life cycles is challenging b...
Parental care and filial cannibalism (the consumption of one's own offspring) co-occur in many anima...
Filial cannibalism occurs in many animal species ranging from insects to mammals, and is especially ...
Insect parental care is extensive and varied, but its life history implications have never been comp...
All organisms live in environments that are variable across space and time. Variation in selection a...