The maintenance of species boundaries when opportunities for admixture are abundant, is a poorly understood phenomenon for many taxa. While many mechanisms for maintaining species boundaries have been described their relative importance depends largely on the particulars of the system in question. Aggregating social behavior can be a means to keep sympatric sister species distinct if it leads to segregation during reproduction. The widespread Caribbean reef gobies Coryphopterus personatus and C. hyalinus are sympatric sister species with nearly identical morphology that spend their entire adult lives in shoals in which reproduction occurs. To date no studies have investigated whether shoals are species-specific, which would be expected if a...
The pelagic larvae of many marine organisms can potentially disperse across hundreds of kilometers, ...
Coral reefs are highly diverse ecosystems, where numerous closely related species often coexist. How...
The genetic divergence and evolution of new species within the geographic range of a single populati...
We investigated the effects of interspecific competition on abundance, habitat partitioning, and coe...
Social group size, mating systems and sex allocation strategies in fish can covary with habitat patc...
Research on sociality in marine fishes is a vibrant field that is providing new insights into social...
Social and mating systems can be influenced by the distribution, abundance, and economic defendabili...
Graduation date: 1994Early theoretical models for the evolution of male-female\ud pairing were based...
The role of competition in regulating reef fish populations has been controversial. Here, we test th...
To investigate factors promoting monogamy, we studied the reproductive behaviour and ecology of the ...
Studies of speciation in the marine environment have historically compared broad-scale distributions...
Hybridization and introgression are evolutionarily significant phenomena breaking down species bound...
"Among all vertebrates, gobies are second in diversity only to the teleost family Cyprinidae. The Go...
The coexistence of multiple species on a smaller number of limiting resources is an enduring ecologi...
<div><p>To address patterns of genetic connectivity in a mass-aggregating marine fish, we analyzed g...
The pelagic larvae of many marine organisms can potentially disperse across hundreds of kilometers, ...
Coral reefs are highly diverse ecosystems, where numerous closely related species often coexist. How...
The genetic divergence and evolution of new species within the geographic range of a single populati...
We investigated the effects of interspecific competition on abundance, habitat partitioning, and coe...
Social group size, mating systems and sex allocation strategies in fish can covary with habitat patc...
Research on sociality in marine fishes is a vibrant field that is providing new insights into social...
Social and mating systems can be influenced by the distribution, abundance, and economic defendabili...
Graduation date: 1994Early theoretical models for the evolution of male-female\ud pairing were based...
The role of competition in regulating reef fish populations has been controversial. Here, we test th...
To investigate factors promoting monogamy, we studied the reproductive behaviour and ecology of the ...
Studies of speciation in the marine environment have historically compared broad-scale distributions...
Hybridization and introgression are evolutionarily significant phenomena breaking down species bound...
"Among all vertebrates, gobies are second in diversity only to the teleost family Cyprinidae. The Go...
The coexistence of multiple species on a smaller number of limiting resources is an enduring ecologi...
<div><p>To address patterns of genetic connectivity in a mass-aggregating marine fish, we analyzed g...
The pelagic larvae of many marine organisms can potentially disperse across hundreds of kilometers, ...
Coral reefs are highly diverse ecosystems, where numerous closely related species often coexist. How...
The genetic divergence and evolution of new species within the geographic range of a single populati...