This is the final version of the article. Available from Nature Publishing Group via the DOI in this record.Biological market theory is potentially useful for understanding helping behaviour in animal societies. It predicts that competition for trading partners will affect the value of commodities exchanged. It has gained empirical support in cooperative breeders, where subordinates help dominant breeders in exchange for group membership, but so far without considering one crucial aspect: outside options. We find support for a biological market in paper wasps, Polistes dominula. We first show that females have a choice of cooperative partners. Second, by manipulating entire subpopulations in the field, we increase the supply of outside opti...
The costs and benefits of different social options are best understood when individuals can be follo...
Explaining the evolution of helping behaviour in the eusocial insects where non-reproductive ('worke...
Recent evolutionary models of reproductive partitioning within animal societies (known as `optimal s...
Biological market theory is potentially useful for understanding helping behaviour in animal societi...
A major aim in evolutionary biology is to understand altruistic help and reproductive partitioning i...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Springer Verlag via the DOI in this record....
This is the final version. Available on open access from Public Library of Science via the DOI in th...
In this dissertation, I combine theoretical and empirical approaches, as well as concepts from the h...
Reproduction in cooperative animal groups is often dominated by one or a few individuals, with the r...
Recent theory and empirical studies of avian biparental systems suggest that animals resolve conflic...
PublishedJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tThis is the final version of the article. Av...
Little attention has been paid to a conspicuous and universal feature of animal societies: the varia...
Little attention has been paid to a conspicuous and universal feature of animal societies: the varia...
Cooperative breeding decreases the direct reproductive output of subordinate individuals, but cooper...
R.A.B. is supported by a NERC DTG studentship to R.A.B.Research over the past two decades suggests t...
The costs and benefits of different social options are best understood when individuals can be follo...
Explaining the evolution of helping behaviour in the eusocial insects where non-reproductive ('worke...
Recent evolutionary models of reproductive partitioning within animal societies (known as `optimal s...
Biological market theory is potentially useful for understanding helping behaviour in animal societi...
A major aim in evolutionary biology is to understand altruistic help and reproductive partitioning i...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Springer Verlag via the DOI in this record....
This is the final version. Available on open access from Public Library of Science via the DOI in th...
In this dissertation, I combine theoretical and empirical approaches, as well as concepts from the h...
Reproduction in cooperative animal groups is often dominated by one or a few individuals, with the r...
Recent theory and empirical studies of avian biparental systems suggest that animals resolve conflic...
PublishedJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tThis is the final version of the article. Av...
Little attention has been paid to a conspicuous and universal feature of animal societies: the varia...
Little attention has been paid to a conspicuous and universal feature of animal societies: the varia...
Cooperative breeding decreases the direct reproductive output of subordinate individuals, but cooper...
R.A.B. is supported by a NERC DTG studentship to R.A.B.Research over the past two decades suggests t...
The costs and benefits of different social options are best understood when individuals can be follo...
Explaining the evolution of helping behaviour in the eusocial insects where non-reproductive ('worke...
Recent evolutionary models of reproductive partitioning within animal societies (known as `optimal s...