This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this recordResource value assessment, in which competitors adjust behaviours according to the perceived value of a contested resource, is well described in animal contests. Such assessment is usually assumed to be categorical or linear; for example, males fight more aggressively when females are present than absent, or as female fecundity increases. Here, to our knowledge for the first time, we show quadratic resource value assessment, in which resource value is highest at a certain level and decreases in either direction. The mantis shrimp Neogonodactylus bredini occupies coral rubble burrows in a size-assortative manner: individuals of a ce...
In animal contests, individuals can either engage in mutual assessment of both their own and their o...
International audienceAlthough animal contests for resources are often settled in favour of individu...
Measurements of energy use, and its scaling with size, are critical to understanding how organisms a...
Safe and effective conflict resolution is critical for survival and reproduction. Theoretical models...
Safe and effective conflict resolution is critical for survival and reproduction. Theoretical models...
Animals compete in contests over limited resources, and contestants with greater fighting ability, o...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2015. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
Animal contests occur in a large variety of taxa. The costs associated with fighting are present reg...
<abs> Competition for resource, including territories is seen in a broad range of taxa1. There...
Two major categories of factors are predicted to influence behaviour in dyadic contests; differences...
Males sometimes engage in fights over contested resources such as access to mates; in this case, fig...
Studies of mating contests have reported how traits (e.g. body size) related to resource holding pot...
Abstract Background Aggressive behaviour is widely observed in animal kingdom, which compete for res...
Theory on the sequential assessment model (SAM) has frequently been tested by using swimming crabs o...
Game theory has been used to investigate a wide range of evolutionary questions, and has been import...
In animal contests, individuals can either engage in mutual assessment of both their own and their o...
International audienceAlthough animal contests for resources are often settled in favour of individu...
Measurements of energy use, and its scaling with size, are critical to understanding how organisms a...
Safe and effective conflict resolution is critical for survival and reproduction. Theoretical models...
Safe and effective conflict resolution is critical for survival and reproduction. Theoretical models...
Animals compete in contests over limited resources, and contestants with greater fighting ability, o...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2015. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
Animal contests occur in a large variety of taxa. The costs associated with fighting are present reg...
<abs> Competition for resource, including territories is seen in a broad range of taxa1. There...
Two major categories of factors are predicted to influence behaviour in dyadic contests; differences...
Males sometimes engage in fights over contested resources such as access to mates; in this case, fig...
Studies of mating contests have reported how traits (e.g. body size) related to resource holding pot...
Abstract Background Aggressive behaviour is widely observed in animal kingdom, which compete for res...
Theory on the sequential assessment model (SAM) has frequently been tested by using swimming crabs o...
Game theory has been used to investigate a wide range of evolutionary questions, and has been import...
In animal contests, individuals can either engage in mutual assessment of both their own and their o...
International audienceAlthough animal contests for resources are often settled in favour of individu...
Measurements of energy use, and its scaling with size, are critical to understanding how organisms a...