Life history theory predicts that as organisms approach the end of their lifespan they should increase their reproductive effort (RE). In mammals, reproduction involves large transfers of energy from mothers to young, so the theory predicts an increase in energy transfer by older mothers. However, this measure of RE is typically constant with maternal age. This might be because in mammals the offspring has some control over energy transfer and this constrains adaptive variation in RE by mothers. Such an effect might be strong in placental mammals because of the offspring’s control of placental function, but in marsupials energy transfer is overwhelmingly by lactation and is firmly under maternal control, leaving marsupial mothers free to va...
Over many millions of years of independent evolution, placental, marsupial and monotreme mammals ha...
The cumulative amount of energy that a female invests (maternal energy investment, MI) in her young ...
Offspring sex ratios in mammals vary in potentially adaptive yet unpredictable ways. An integrative ...
Life history theory predicts that as organisms approach the end of their lifespan they should increa...
The degree to which females allocate resources between current reproduction, future fecundity and su...
Evolutionary explanations for life history diversity are based on the idea of costs of reproduction,...
Recently, Weisbecker and Goswami presented the first comprehensive comparative analysis of brain si...
Reproduction and especially lactation are nutritionally costly for mammals. Maternal access to adequ...
Marsupial species provide an important research tool in attempts to unravel the complicated mechanis...
Variation in life-history strategies has usually been characterized as a single fast-slow continuum ...
A fundamental life history question is how individuals should allocate resources to reproduction opt...
There is growing evidence that the sex ratios of wild vertebrate populations are determined by mecha...
Age-related changes in maternal reproductive allocation for long-lived species are a key prediction ...
1. Adaptive adjustments in offspring sex ratios in mammals have long been reported, but the conditio...
There is growing evidence that the sex ratios of wild vertebrate populations are determined by mecha...
Over many millions of years of independent evolution, placental, marsupial and monotreme mammals ha...
The cumulative amount of energy that a female invests (maternal energy investment, MI) in her young ...
Offspring sex ratios in mammals vary in potentially adaptive yet unpredictable ways. An integrative ...
Life history theory predicts that as organisms approach the end of their lifespan they should increa...
The degree to which females allocate resources between current reproduction, future fecundity and su...
Evolutionary explanations for life history diversity are based on the idea of costs of reproduction,...
Recently, Weisbecker and Goswami presented the first comprehensive comparative analysis of brain si...
Reproduction and especially lactation are nutritionally costly for mammals. Maternal access to adequ...
Marsupial species provide an important research tool in attempts to unravel the complicated mechanis...
Variation in life-history strategies has usually been characterized as a single fast-slow continuum ...
A fundamental life history question is how individuals should allocate resources to reproduction opt...
There is growing evidence that the sex ratios of wild vertebrate populations are determined by mecha...
Age-related changes in maternal reproductive allocation for long-lived species are a key prediction ...
1. Adaptive adjustments in offspring sex ratios in mammals have long been reported, but the conditio...
There is growing evidence that the sex ratios of wild vertebrate populations are determined by mecha...
Over many millions of years of independent evolution, placental, marsupial and monotreme mammals ha...
The cumulative amount of energy that a female invests (maternal energy investment, MI) in her young ...
Offspring sex ratios in mammals vary in potentially adaptive yet unpredictable ways. An integrative ...