Adaptive developmental plasticity has been demonstrated across a number of taxa in response to variables such as photoperiod, resource abundance, and predator presence. Demographics also vary temporally and spatially within populations, but few studies have examined the possibility that developmental plasticity in response to changes in these variables can alter phenotypic distributions. Plastic responses to variable population density and sex ratio may play an important role in explaining phenotypic variation in nature. In this study, we examine two species of spiders (Nephila plumipes and Argiope keyserlingi) to examine whether there is evidence that males alter their development in response to demographics in natural populations. We stud...
In a study of the spider Pholcus phalangioides, we double-mated large or small females with large an...
The expected strong directional selection for traits that increase a male's mating ability conflicts...
Developmental plasticity alters phenotypes and can in that way change the response to selection and ...
Our understanding of selection in nature stems mainly from whole-season and cross-sectional estimate...
Background: Socially cued anticipatory plasticity (SCAP) has been proposed as a widespread mechanism...
Female‐biased sexual size dimorphism (SSD) is often considered an epiphenomenon of selection for the...
In many spiders, females are significantly larger than males. Several theories have been postulated ...
Reproductive success of males is strongly influenced by their investment in costly sexually selected...
The maintenance of variation in sexually-selected traits is of great interest in evolutionary biolog...
Animal species’ body sizes result from the balance between selection for survival and selection for ...
Animal species’ body sizes result from the balance between selection for survival and selection for ...
Sexual selection drives the evolution of male morphology, life history, physiology, and behaviour ac...
Sexual dimorphism describes substantial differences between male and female phenotypes. In spiders, ...
When populations face different environmental conditions, both local adaptation and phenotypic plast...
Extreme sexual size dimorphism (SSD) is relatively rare in animal species. Males are much smaller th...
In a study of the spider Pholcus phalangioides, we double-mated large or small females with large an...
The expected strong directional selection for traits that increase a male's mating ability conflicts...
Developmental plasticity alters phenotypes and can in that way change the response to selection and ...
Our understanding of selection in nature stems mainly from whole-season and cross-sectional estimate...
Background: Socially cued anticipatory plasticity (SCAP) has been proposed as a widespread mechanism...
Female‐biased sexual size dimorphism (SSD) is often considered an epiphenomenon of selection for the...
In many spiders, females are significantly larger than males. Several theories have been postulated ...
Reproductive success of males is strongly influenced by their investment in costly sexually selected...
The maintenance of variation in sexually-selected traits is of great interest in evolutionary biolog...
Animal species’ body sizes result from the balance between selection for survival and selection for ...
Animal species’ body sizes result from the balance between selection for survival and selection for ...
Sexual selection drives the evolution of male morphology, life history, physiology, and behaviour ac...
Sexual dimorphism describes substantial differences between male and female phenotypes. In spiders, ...
When populations face different environmental conditions, both local adaptation and phenotypic plast...
Extreme sexual size dimorphism (SSD) is relatively rare in animal species. Males are much smaller th...
In a study of the spider Pholcus phalangioides, we double-mated large or small females with large an...
The expected strong directional selection for traits that increase a male's mating ability conflicts...
Developmental plasticity alters phenotypes and can in that way change the response to selection and ...