Elevational gradients provide a powerful laboratory for understanding the environmental and ecological drivers of geographic variation in avian life-history strategies. Environmental variation across elevational gradients is hypothesized to select for a trade-off of reduced fecundity (lower clutch size and/or fewer broods) for higher offspring quality (larger eggs and/or increased parental care) in higher elevation species and populations. In birds, a focus on altricial species from north temperate latitudes has prevented an evaluation of the generality of this trade-off, and how it is affected by latitude and intrinsic factors (development mode). We performed a comparative analysis controlling for body size and phylogenetic relationships o...
1. Latitudinal variation among species in life-history traits is often suggested to contribute to hi...
1. Life history varies across latitudes, with the 'pace of life' being 'slower' in tropical regions....
H. Bears, K. Martin & G.C. White (2009) Breeding in high-elevation habitat results in shift to s...
Elevational gradients provide a powerful laboratory for understanding the environmental and ecologic...
Elevational gradients provide a powerful laboratory for understanding the environmental and ecologic...
Elevational gradients provide powerful natural systems for testing hypotheses regarding the role of ...
Natural selection favors traits that enhance fitness in a species and species occur in habitats for ...
Forty percent of the terrestrial planet is mountainous, yet little is known about how breeding eleva...
Comparative studies, across and within taxa, have made important contributions to our understanding ...
1. Life history varies across latitudes, with the ‘pace of life’ being ‘slower’ in tropical regions....
1.Most tropical bird species have narrow elevational ranges, likely reflecting climatic specializati...
1.Most tropical bird species have narrow elevational ranges, likely reflecting climatic specializati...
Current thinking suggests that survival, and consequently lifespan of organisms, can be understood i...
Tropical mountains harbor exceptionally high biodiversity, which is in part due to the marked elevat...
Phenotypic plasticity is an important mechanism for populations to respond to fluctuating environmen...
1. Latitudinal variation among species in life-history traits is often suggested to contribute to hi...
1. Life history varies across latitudes, with the 'pace of life' being 'slower' in tropical regions....
H. Bears, K. Martin & G.C. White (2009) Breeding in high-elevation habitat results in shift to s...
Elevational gradients provide a powerful laboratory for understanding the environmental and ecologic...
Elevational gradients provide a powerful laboratory for understanding the environmental and ecologic...
Elevational gradients provide powerful natural systems for testing hypotheses regarding the role of ...
Natural selection favors traits that enhance fitness in a species and species occur in habitats for ...
Forty percent of the terrestrial planet is mountainous, yet little is known about how breeding eleva...
Comparative studies, across and within taxa, have made important contributions to our understanding ...
1. Life history varies across latitudes, with the ‘pace of life’ being ‘slower’ in tropical regions....
1.Most tropical bird species have narrow elevational ranges, likely reflecting climatic specializati...
1.Most tropical bird species have narrow elevational ranges, likely reflecting climatic specializati...
Current thinking suggests that survival, and consequently lifespan of organisms, can be understood i...
Tropical mountains harbor exceptionally high biodiversity, which is in part due to the marked elevat...
Phenotypic plasticity is an important mechanism for populations to respond to fluctuating environmen...
1. Latitudinal variation among species in life-history traits is often suggested to contribute to hi...
1. Life history varies across latitudes, with the 'pace of life' being 'slower' in tropical regions....
H. Bears, K. Martin & G.C. White (2009) Breeding in high-elevation habitat results in shift to s...