0000000000964062

AUTHOR

Hanna Kokko

showing 43 related works from this author

How partnerships end in guillemots Uria aalge : chance events, adaptive change, or forced divorce?

2007

Divorce in socially monogamous species can result from different mechanisms, for example, chance events, active desertion of the partner, or the intrusion of a third individual ousting the partner. We compared the predictions associated with such mechanisms with data from common guillemots (Uria aalge) breeding on the Isle of May, Scotland. The data cover the years 1982--2005 and show a yearly divorce rate of 10.2%. In most divorces (86%), one of the original partners moved to another breeding site, whereas the other bird stayed and bred with a new partner. On average, movers had a significantly lower breeding success after divorce, stayers were largely unaffected, whereas the incoming bird…

0106 biological sciencesreunification rateEcologycommon guillemots05 social sciencesAdaptive changeBiologybiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesforced divorceIntrusionauks (Alcidae)pair bondscommon murresAccidentalUria aalge0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAnimal Science and Zoology050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologyNegative correlationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographyDiversity (business)
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It takes two to tango

2003

Abstract In most taxa, females are more likely than males to care for offspring. Why? Ever since Trivers' landmark work, the answer has been traced back to sexual differences in pre-mating reproductive investment (unequal gamete size or anisogamy). However, recent work shows that parental investment theory has inadvertently ignored a profoundly simple fact of life: every offspring has a mother and father. Taking this into account completely changes how we should think about sex differences in parental care.

Sexual conflictAnisogamyOffspringBateman's principlePsychologyParental investmentInvestment (macroeconomics)Paternal careEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDevelopmental psychologySimple factTrends in Ecology & Evolution
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Stepping stones of life: natal dispersal in the group-living but noncooperative speckled warbler

2003

In most cooperatively breeding birds the offspring of one sex, usually male, delays dispersal to remain on the natal territory and helps its parents to rear subsequent young. Thus delayed dispersal could be the first step in the evolution of cooperative breeding. We studied natal dispersal in a population of the group-living speckled warbler, Chthonicola sagittata, based on observations of a colour-banded population over 3 years. Unlike other group-living members of the Acanthizinae, all juvenile males in this population dispersed to settle on foreign territories as subordinates, which do not help rear the young. Speckled warblers showed all the life history traits that are thought to resul…

education.field_of_studyPopulationBiologybiology.organism_classificationLife history theoryNatal homingCooperative breedingBiological dispersalAnimal Science and ZoologyPhilopatryeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSex ratioDemographySpeckled warblerAnimal Behaviour
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Priority versus Brute Force: When Should Males Begin Guarding Resources?

2004

When should males begin guarding a resource when both resources and guarders vary in quality? This general problem applies, for example, to migrant birds occupying territories in the spring and to precopula in crustaceans where males grab females before they molt and become receptive. Previous work has produced conflicting predictions. Theory on migrant birds predicts that the strongest competitors should often arrive first, whereas some models of mate guarding have predicted that the strongest competitors wait and then simply usurp a female from a weaker competitor. We build a general model of resource guarding that allows varying the ease with which takeovers occur. The model is phrased i…

MaleCompetitive BehaviorResource (biology)media_common.quotation_subjectPopulation DynamicsBiologyModels Biologicalmating dynamicsSexual Behavior AnimalRace (biology)Resource Acquisition Is InitializationAnimalsESSQuality (business)Selection GeneticEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commontakeoversmate guardingGuard (information security)Mate guardingEcologycrustaceansResource guardingCompetitor analysisguarding criterionBody ConstitutionFemaleDemographic economicsThe American Naturalist
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Daphnia females adjust sex allocation in response to current sex ratio and density

2018

Cyclical parthenogenesis presents an interesting challenge for the study of sex allocation, as individuals’ allocation decisions involve both the choice between sexual and asexual reproduction, and the choice between sons and daughters. Male production is therefore expected to depend on ecological and evolutionary drivers of overall investment in sex, and those influencing male reproductive value during sexual periods. We manipulated experimental populations, and made repeated observations of natural populations over their growing season, to disentangle effects of population density and the timing of sex from effects of adult sex ratio on sex allocation in cyclically parthenogenetic Daphnia…

Male0106 biological sciencesLIZARDSsukupuolen määräytyminenParthenogenesisDaphnia magna01 natural sciencesPopulation densityLOCAL ADAPTATIONMETAPOPULATIONSex allocationsex allocationeducation.field_of_studyEcologyReproductionINDUCTIONPOPULATION-DENSITYBiological EvolutionCRUSTACEA1181 Ecology evolutionary biology590 Animals (Zoology)FemaleReproductive valueHAPLODIPLOID CYCLICAL PARTHENOGENSsuvuton lisääntyminenSex ratioOffspringcyclical parthenogenCLADOCERAPopulationsex ratio adjustmentBiology010603 evolutionary biology10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental StudiesAnimalsSex Ratioeducationpopulation densityEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLocal adaptationAVAILABILITY010604 marine biology & hydrobiologypartenogeneesipopulaatiodynamiikkaSexual reproduction1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDaphniaMAGNAvesikirput570 Life sciences; biologyta1181asukastiheysDemographyEcology Letters
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Quantifying male attractiveness

2003

Genetic models of sexual selection are concerned with a dynamic process in which female preference and male trait values coevolve. We present a rigorous method for characterizing evolutionary endpoints of this process in phenotypic terms. In our phenotypic characterization the mate-choice strategy of female population members determines how attractive females should find each male, and a population is evolutionarily stable if population members are actually behaving in this way. This provides a justification of phenotypic explanations of sexual selection and the insights into sexual selection that they provide. Furthermore, the phenotypic approach also has enormous advantages over a genetic…

MalePopulationBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEvolutionarily stable strategySexual Behavior AnimalGenetic modelAnimalsComputer SimulationSelection GeneticeducationGeneral Environmental Scienceeducation.field_of_studyModels GeneticGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyInheritance (genetic algorithm)General MedicineBiological EvolutionPreferenceGenetic architecturePhenotypeMate choiceEvolutionary biologySexual selectionFemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesResearch ArticleProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
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Reproductive timing and individual fitness

2002

Estimation of individual fitness – i.e. description of the extent to which an individual's genes are represented in future generations – is a feature central to most evolutionary studies. Lifetime reproductive success (LRS) is a commonly used estimate of individual fitness, but because it is rate-insensitive (i.e. timing of reproductive events is not incorporated), it may give a biased estimate of fitness when reproductive timing is an important component of fitness. A review of all empirical studies which have used a recently derived, rate-sensitive estimate of individual fitness, λind revealed that λind ranks the fitness of phenotypes differently from LRS, and that this difference may lea…

0106 biological sciencesEstimation0303 health sciencesReproductive successEcologyContrast (statistics)Phenotypic traitBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenetic loadTest (assessment)03 medical and health sciencesEmpirical researchEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)030304 developmental biologyEcology Letters
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The evolution of sex roles in mate searching

2016

Searching for mates is a critical stage in the life cycle of most internally, and many externally, fertilizing species. Males usually invest more in this costly activity than females, but the reasons for this are poorly understood. Previous models have shown that female-biased parental investment, including anisogamy, does not by itself select for male-biased mate searching, so it requires additional explanations. Here, we correct and expand upon earlier models, and present two novel hypotheses that might explain the evolution of male-biased mate searching. The "carry-over hypothesis" states that females benefit less from searching if the associated costs affect other stages of the life cyc…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineEvolution of sexual reproductionEcologyGenetic FitnessBiological evolutionBiologyAffect (psychology)010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyAnisogamyEvolutionary biologyGeneticsGeneral patternMatingGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesParental investmentEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution
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Territorial defense, territory size, and population regulation.

2005

The carrying capacity of an environment is determined partly by how individuals compete over the available resources. To territorial animals, space is an important resource, leading to conflict over its use. We build a model where the carrying capacity for an organism in a given environment results from the evolution of territorial defense effort and the consequent space use. The same evolutionary process can yield two completely different modes of population regulation. Density dependence arises through expanding and shrinking territories if fecundity is low, breeding success increases gradually with territory size, and/or defense is cheap. By contrast, when fecundity is high, breeding suc…

Population Densityeducation.field_of_studyResource (biology)EcologyNatural resource economicsReproductionPopulationPopulation DynamicsTerritorialityBiologyFecundityPopulation densityBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalDensity dependencePopulation growthCarrying capacityAnimalseducationTerritorialityEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcosystemThe American naturalist
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Daphnia invest in sexual reproduction when its relative costs are reduced

2018

The timing of sex in facultatively sexual organisms is critical to fitness, due to the differing demographic consequences of sexual versus asexual reproduction. In addition to the costs of sex itself, an association of sex with the production of dormant life stages also influences the optimal use of sex, especially in environments where resting eggs are essential to survive unfavourable conditions. Here we document population dynamics and the occurrence of sexual reproduction in natural populations of Daphnia magna across their growing season. The frequency of sexually reproducing females and males increased with population density and with decreasing asexual clutch sizes. The frequency of…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineLIFE-HISTORYsexual reproductioncost of sexAsexual reproductionCYCLICAL PARTHENOGENS01 natural sciencesDaphniaPopulation density2300 General Environmental Sciencetiming of sexLOCAL ADAPTATION2400 General Immunology and Microbiologypopulation dynamicsGeneral Environmental Scienceeducation.field_of_studybiologyINDUCTIONMIXED-EFFECTS MODELSGeneral MedicineCladocera1181 Ecology evolutionary biology590 Animals (Zoology)General Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolutionPopulationDaphnia magna1100 General Agricultural and Biological SciencesPULEX010603 evolutionary biologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciences10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies1300 General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyPopulation growtheducationpopulation densityLocal adaptationROTIFERSGeneral Immunology and Microbiologysuvullinen lisääntyminenreproduction (biology)biology.organism_classificationlisääntyminenpopulaatiodynamiikkaSexual reproduction030104 developmental biologyDaphniaMAGNADENSITYvesikirputta1181570 Life sciences; biologyDemography
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Seasonal changes in predator community switch the direction of selection for prey defences

2014

Insect communities consist of aposematic species with efficient warning colours against predation, as well as abundant examples of crypsis. To understand such coexistence, we here report results from a field experiment where relative survival of artificial larvae, varying in conspicuousness, was estimated in natural bird communities over an entire season. This takes advantage of natural variation in the proportion of naive predators: naivety peaks when young birds have just fledged. We show that the relative benefit of warning signals and crypsis changes accordingly. When naive birds are rare (early and late in the season), conspicuous warning signals improve survival, but conspicuousness b…

Food ChainNaivetymedia_common.quotation_subjectAdaptation BiologicalGeneral Physics and Astronomy1600 General ChemistryGenetics and Molecular BiologyInsectAposematismBiologyArticleStatistics NonparametricGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyPredationBirds10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental StudiesFood chainSpecies Specificity1300 General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyAnimalsOrganic ChemicalsSelection GeneticPredatorFinlandmedia_commonMultidisciplinaryPigmentationEcologyFledgeGeneral Chemistry3100 General Physics and AstronomyLepidopteraLarvaGeneral BiochemistryCrypsista1181570 Life sciences; biology590 Animals (Zoology)SeasonsNature Communications
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Negative frequency-dependent selection of sexually antagonistic alleles in Myodes glareolus.

2011

Sexually antagonistic genetic variation, where optimal values of traits are sex-dependent, is known to slow the loss of genetic variance associated with directional selection on fitness-related traits. However, sexual antagonism alone is not sufficient to maintain variation indefinitely. Selection of rare forms within the sexes can help to conserve genotypic diversity. We combined theoretical models and a field experiment with Myodes glareolus to show that negative frequency-dependent selection on male dominance maintains variation in sexually antagonistic alleles. In our experiment, high-dominance male bank voles were found to have low-fecundity sisters, and vice versa. These results show …

0106 biological sciencesMaleLitter SizeFrequency-dependent selectionZoologyBiologySocial Environment010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesLife history theory03 medical and health sciencesSexual Behavior AnimalGenetic variationAnimalsGenetic variabilityAlleleSelection GeneticAllelesEcosystem030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesSex CharacteristicsMultidisciplinaryNatural selectionModels GeneticDirectional selectionArvicolinaeGenetic VariationFertilitySocial DominanceEvolutionary ecologyFemaleGenetic FitnessScience (New York, N.Y.)
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Sex Allocation Theory for Facultatively Sexual Organisms Inhabiting Seasonal Environments: The Importance of Bet Hedging

2018

Adaptive explanations for dormancy often invoke bet hedging, where reduced mean fitness can be adaptive if it associates with reduced fitness variance. Sex allocation theory typically ignores variance effects and focuses on mean fitness. For many cyclical parthenogens, these themes become linked, as only sexually produced eggs undergo the dormancy needed to survive harsh conditions. We ask how sex allocation and the timing of sex evolve when this constraint exists in the form of a trade-off between asexual reproduction and sexual production of dormant eggs-the former being crucial for within-season success and the latter for survival across seasons. We show that male production can be tempo…

Male0106 biological sciencesEcology (disciplines)Fitness varianceBiologyModels Biological010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPopulation densitytiming of sexReproduction AsexualAnimalspopulation densityPopulation Growthbet hedgingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSex allocationsex allocationEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyfacultative sexClutch SizeDaphniaOviparityta1181DormancyFemaleGenetic FitnessSeasonsAlgorithmsThe American Naturalist
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Identification of five novel tectiviruses in Bacillus strains: analysis of a highly variable region generating genetic diversity

2013

Our biosphere is abundant with unique and small genes for which no homologs are known. These genes, often referred to as orphans or ORFans, are commonly found in bacteriophage genomes but their origins remain unclear. We discovered five novel tectivirus-like genetic elements by screening more than five-hundred Bacillus strains. A highly variable region (HVR) of these viruses was shown to harbor ORFans in most of these otherwise well-conserved bacteriophages. Previous studies demonstrated that mutations close to this region dramatically alter bacteriophage gene regulation, suggesting that the acquisition of those ORFans may provide a source of genetic diversity that is then subject to geneti…

Molecular Sequence DataBacillusBacillus PhagesMicrobiologyGenomeBacteriophageMicroscopy Electron TransmissionLysogenic cycleGenetic variationAmino Acid SequenceGenetic variabilityMolecular BiologyGeneGeneticsGenetic diversitybiologyVirionta1182Genetic VariationSequence Analysis DNAGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationBacillus PhageDNA ViralSequence AlignmentTectiviridaeResearch in Microbiology
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Sex ratio and sexual conflict in a collective action problem

2020

AbstractThe maintenance of cooperation is difficult whenever collective action problems are vulnerable to freeriding (reaping the benefits without contributing to the maintenance of the good). We identify a novel factor that can make a system tolerate an extent of freeriding. If a population consists of discrete types with demographically distinct roles, such that the success of one type does not imply it can spread to replace other types in the population, then collective goods may persist in the presence of free-riders because they are necessarily kept in a minority role. Biased sex ratios (e.g. in haplodiploids) create conditions where individuals of one sex are a minority. We show that …

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyPopulationfungiLimitingPublic goodCollective action010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPredationSexual conflict03 medical and health sciencesHaplodiploidyeducationPsychologySocial psychologySex ratio030304 developmental biology
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Multiple mating by females is a natural outcome of a null model of mate encounters

2012

Why do females of so many species mate multiply? The question makes use of an implicit null model that females by default should be monandrous and that polyandry requires an explanation. Here, we make thesimplepoint that females encountermates overtheir lifetimeina stochasticmanner,andas theyshouldacceptatleastonemale,acceptanceofallmales maybea betternullmodelthanthemore advanced strategy of accepting thefirst satisfactory one and rejecting all others. The advantage of this view is that it makes it explicit that females must accept and reject mates without precise knowledge of future mate encounters. In insects, for example, limitations of cognitive and sensory capabilities make it hard fo…

Mate choiceEcologyNull modelInsect ScienceModel studyMonandrousNatural (music)MatingBiologySocial psychologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOutcome (probability)Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata
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From arctic lemmings to adaptive dynamics: Charles Elton's legacy in population ecology.

2001

We shall examine the impact of Charles S. Elton's 1924 article on periodic fluctuations in animal populations on the development of modern population ecology. We argue that his impact has been substantial and that during the past 75 years of research on multi-annual periodic fluctuations in numbers of voles, lemmings, hares, lynx and game animals he has contributed much to the contemporary understanding of the causes and consequences of population regulation. Elton was convinced that the cause of the regular fluctuations was climatic variation. To support this conclusion, he examined long-term population data then available. Despite his firm belief in a climatic cause of the self-repeating …

0106 biological sciencesClimatePopulationCarnivoraPopulation DynamicsBiologyEcological systems theory010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesModels BiologicalGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyAnimalsSpecial casePositive economicsSpeculationeducationBiologyMammalseducation.field_of_studyEcologyEcologyArvicolinae010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyLagomorphaPopulation ecologyBiological SciencesHistory 20th CenturyAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological Evolution010601 ecologyDensity dependenceSpatial ecologyPopulation cycleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesBiological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
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Evolutionary conservation advice for despotic populations: habitat heterogeneity favours conflict and reduces productivity in Seychelles magpie robins

2010

Individual preferences for good habitat are often thought to have a beneficial stabilizing effect for populations. However, if individuals preferentially compete for better-quality territories, these may become hotspots of conflict. We show that, in an endangered species, this process decreases the productivity of favoured territories to the extent that differences in productivity between territories disappear. Unlike predictions from current demographic theory on site-dependent population regulation (ideal despotic distribution), we show that population productivity is reduced if resources are distributed unevenly in space. Competition for high-quality habitat can thus have detrimental con…

0106 biological sciencesMaleConservation of Natural Resourcesmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationEndangered speciesBiologySeychelles010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyCompetition (biology)AnimalsPasseriformeseducationProductivityResearch ArticlesEcosystemGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commoneducation.field_of_studyIdeal free distributionGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyBehavior AnimalEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyReproductionHabitat conservationGeneral Medicine15. Life on landBiological EvolutionSpatial heterogeneitySocial DominanceBiological dispersalFemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesTerritoriality
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Adaptive strategies of territory formation

2003

How do territorial animals gain ownership of an area? Early modelling has considered the evolution of fighting when the winner can claim the right to the resource. Recently, alternative hypotheses have been offered where repeated interactions lead to division of space through 'nagging' instead of one decisive fight. However, these models assume that animals avoid areas in which they have taken part in aggressive interactions, but do not consider whether avoidance itself is adaptive. We aim to bridge this gap between mechanistic and adaptive explanations, by presenting a game-theory model where individuals choose whether to return to an area after a fight with a specific outcome (win, loss, …

0106 biological sciencesAdaptive strategieseducation.field_of_studyAlternative hypothesismedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesPopulationBiologyTerritoriality010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesOutcome (game theory)NaggingAnimal ecology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAnimal Science and Zoology050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologyPositive economicseducationGame theoryEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonBehavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
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Species-level selection reduces selfishness through competitive exclusion.

2007

Adaptation does not necessarily lead to traits which are optimal for the population. This is because selection is often the strongest at the individual or gene level. The evolution of selfishness can lead to a ‘tragedy of the commons’, where traits such as aggression or social cheating reduce population size and may lead to extinction. This suggests that species-level selection will result whenever species differ in the incentive to be selfish. We explore this idea in a simple model that combines individual-level selection with ecology in two interacting species. Our model is not influenced by kin or trait-group selection. We find that individual selection in combination with competitive ex…

0106 biological sciencesCompetitive BehaviorCheatingmedia_common.quotation_subjectconflictPopulationBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesSelfishnessAnimalsSelection Geneticeducation*Models GeneticSocial BehaviorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)030304 developmental biologymedia_common0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyExtinctionModels GeneticEcologyPopulation sizeinterspecific competitionTragedy of the commons15. Life on landBiological EvolutionSelection (Genetics)*EvolutionLevels of selection*Social BehaviorGenetics PopulationEvolutionary biologyAdaptationselfishnessJournal of evolutionary biology
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Social transmission of avoidance among predators facilitates the spread of novel prey.

2018

Warning signals are an effective defence strategy for aposematic prey, but only if they are recognized by potential predators. If predators must eat prey to associate novel warning signals with unpalatability, how can aposematic prey ever evolve? Using experiments with great tits (Parus major) as predators, we show that social transmission enhances the acquisition of avoidance by a predator population. Observing another predator’s disgust towards tasting one novel conspicuous prey item led to fewer aposematic than cryptic prey being eaten for the predator population to learn. Despite reduced personal encounters with unpalatable prey, avoidance persisted and increased over subsequent trials.…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineMaleINFORMATION01 natural sciencesPredationSongbirdsFood chainTITS PARUS-MAJORPredatorDISTASTEFUL PREYeducation.field_of_studyEcologyEcologytalitiainenCrypsis1181 Ecology evolutionary biologySURVIVAL590 Animals (Zoology)FemaleAPOSEMATIC PREYWARNING SIGNALSvaroitusväriCONSPICUOUS PREYFood ChainPopulationAposematismBiology010603 evolutionary biologyeläinten käyttäytyminenModels Biological03 medical and health sciences10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental StudiesAvoidance LearningAnimalseducationSocial BehaviorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsParusbiology.organism_classificationDisgustEVOLUTIONsaalistus030104 developmental biology1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicssocial transmissionDIETARY CONSERVATISMPredatory Behavior570 Life sciences; biologyGREAT TITS2303 Ecology
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Competition for breeding sites and site-dependent population regulation in a highly colonial seabird, the common guillemot Uria aalge

2004

Summary 1. The hypothesis of site-dependent population regulation predicts that birds utilize available nesting sites in a pre-emptive (ideal despotic) manner, leading to density dependence in heterogeneous habitats as poorer sites are used at higher population densities. At small population sizes adaptive site choice protects populations against fluctuations (the buffer effect). 2. Common guillemots Uria aalge (Pontoppidan) breed at high density on sea-cliffs. The population breeding on the Isle of May, Scotland increased by 60% between 1981 and 2000. A good nest-site is a prerequisite for successful breeding and there is much competition for the best sites. Throughout this period, site us…

education.field_of_studyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationBiologybiology.organism_classificationPopulation densityBreedIntraspecific competitionCompetition (biology)Spatial heterogeneitybiology.animalUria aalgeAnimal Science and ZoologySeabirdeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonJournal of Animal Ecology
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Population-level consequences of risky dispersal

2014

Achieving sufficient connectivity between populations is essential for persistence, but costs of dispersal may select against individual traits or behaviours that, if present, would improve connectivity. Existing dispersal models tend to ignore the multitude of risks to individuals: while many assess the effect of mortality costs, there is also a risk of failing to find new habitat, especially when the entire inhabitable area remains both small and fragmented. There are few known rules governing whether individuals evolve to disperse more, or less, than what is ideal for population connectivity and persistence. Here we aim to fill this gap, while also noting that evolution might not only pr…

education.field_of_studyPopulation levelHabitatIndividual heterogeneityEcologyEcology (disciplines)Populationta1181Biological dispersalBiologyeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBirth rateOikos
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SEXUALLY SELECTED TRAITS EVOLVE POSITIVE ALLOMETRY WHEN SOME MATINGS OCCUR IRRESPECTIVE OF THE TRAIT

2014

Positive allometry of secondary sexual traits (whereby larger individuals have disproportionally larger traits than smaller individuals) has been called one of the most pervasive and poorly understood regularities in the study of animal form and function. Its widespread occurrence is in contrast with theoretical predictions that it should evolve only under rather special circumstances. Using a combination of mathematical modeling and simulations, here we show that positive allometry is predicted to evolve under much broader conditions than previously recognized. This result hinges on the assumption that mating success is not necessarily zero for males with the lowest trait values: for examp…

EcologyForm and functionEvolutionary biologySexual selectionTrade offsGeneticsTraitAllometryBiologyBody sizeMatingGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution
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Debating Sexual Selection and Mating Strategies

2006

Published at full length with the title 'Reproductive behaviour: sexual selection remains the best explanation' in Science E-letters, 6 April 2006

0106 biological sciences0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinarymedia_common.quotation_subject010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesConceptual frameworkSexual behaviorCompetitive behaviorSexual selectionCooperative behaviorReproductionMatingPsychologySocial psychologyGame theory030304 developmental biologymedia_commonScience
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SEXUAL SELECTION WHEN FERTILIZATION IS NOT GUARANTEED

2005

Much of the theory of sexual selection assumes that females do not generally experience difficulties getting their eggs fertilized, yet sperm limitation is occasionally documented. How often does male limitation form a selection for female traits that improve their mating rate? The question is difficult to test, because if such traits evolve to be efficient, sperm limitation will no longer appear to be a problem to females. Here, we suggest that changes in choosiness between populations, and in particular between virgin and mated females, offer an efficient way to test this hypothesis. We model the "wallflower effect," that is, changes in female preferences due to time and mortality costs o…

0106 biological sciences0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSperm03 medical and health sciencesWallflowerMate choiceSexual selectionGeneticsMatingGeneral Agricultural and Biological ScienceseducationSperm precedenceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)030304 developmental biologyDemographyEvolution
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Colour polymorphism torn apart by opposing positive frequency-dependent selection, yet maintained in space.

2015

Summary Polymorphic warning signals in aposematic species are enigmatic because predator learning and discrimination should select for the most common coloration, resulting in positive frequency‐dependent survival selection. Here, we investigated whether differential mating success could create sufficiently strong negative frequency‐dependent selection for rare morphs to explain polymorphic (white and yellow) warning coloration in male wood tiger moths (Parasemia plantaginis). We conducted an experiment in semi‐natural conditions where we estimated mating success for both white and yellow male moths under three different morph frequencies. Contrary to expectations, mating success was positi…

MaleFrequency-dependent selectionColorAposematismBiologyMothsSexual Behavior AnimalParasemia plantaginisAnimalsMatingPredatorreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)FinlandPolymorphism GeneticEcologyPigmentationfungibiology.organism_classificationFixation (population genetics)Evolutionary biologySexual selectionAnimal Science and ZoologyFemaleGenetic FitnessThe Journal of animal ecology
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Dynamics of the caring family

2003

When several individuals simultaneously provide for offspring, as in families, the effort of any one individual will depend on the efforts of the other family members. This conflict of interest among family members is made more complicated by their relatedness because relatives share genetic interest to some degree. The conflict resolution will also be influenced by the differences in reproductive value between breeders and helpers. Here, we calculate evolutionarily stable provisioning efforts in families with up to two helpers. We explicitly consider that the behavioral choices are made in a life-history context, and we also consider how group sizes change dynamically; this affects, for ex…

Hereditycooperative breedingContext (language use)provisioning effortsBiologymedicine.disease_causeModels BiologicalNesting BehaviorConflict PsychologicalCooperative breedingConflict resolutionHereditymedicineAnimalsESSFamilyCooperative Behaviorevolutionary conflict.Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcologyEcologyReproductionInclusive fitnessProvisioningFeeding BehaviorBiological EvolutionStepfamilyfamily dynamicsReproductive valueload lighteningEnergy MetabolismSocial psychology
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From individual dispersal to species ranges: perspectives for a changing world.

2006

Dispersal is often risky to the individual, yet the long-term survival of populations depends on having a sufficient number of individuals that move, find each other, and locate suitable breeding habitats. This tension has consequences that rarely meet our conservation or management goals. This is particularly true in changing environments, which makes the study of dispersal urgently topical in a world plagued with habitat loss, climate change, and species introductions. Despite the difficulty of tracking mobile individuals over potentially vast ranges, recent research has revealed a multitude of ways in which dispersal evolution can either constrain, or accelerate, species' responses to en…

0106 biological sciencesEcology (disciplines)MovementPopulation DynamicsAdaptation BiologicalClimate changeEnvironment010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHoming BehaviorAnimalsHumansSelection GeneticEcosystemMultidisciplinaryBehavior AnimalEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyReproductionMultitude15. Life on landBiological EvolutionHabitat destructionGeographyHabitatGenesBiological dispersalAnimal MigrationCuesScience (New York, N.Y.)
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The ecogenetic link between demography and evolution: can we bridge the gap between theory and data?

2007

Calls to understand the links between ecology and evolution have been common for decades. Population dynamics, i.e. the demographic changes in populations, arise from life history decisions of individuals and thus are a product of selection, and selection, on the contrary, can be modified by such dynamical properties of the population as density and stability. It follows that generating predictions and testing them correctly requires considering this ecogenetic feedback loop whenever traits have demographic consequences, mediated via density dependence (or frequency dependence). This is not an easy challenge, and arguably theory has advanced at a greater pace than empirical research. Howeve…

0106 biological sciences*Ecosystemcomparative analysisdensity-dependent selectionEcology (disciplines)Frequency-dependent selectionPopulationPopulation DynamicsStability (learning theory)Biologylife history theory010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesecogeneticsLife history theory03 medical and health sciencesEmpirical researchAnimalsexperimental evolutionSelection GeneticeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)Ecosystem030304 developmental biology0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyEcologyEcologyBiological Evolutioneco-evolutionary feedback*Evolution*Selection (Genetics)frequency-dependent selectionEcology/*methodsEvolutionary ecologyEcology letters
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Reproductive conflict delays the recovery of an endangered social species

2008

1. Evolutionary theory predicts that individuals, in order to increase their relative fitness, can evolve behaviours that are detrimental for the group or population. This mismatch is particularly visible in social organisms. Despite its potential to affect the population dynamics of social animals, this principle has not yet been applied to real-life conservation. 2. Social group structure has been argued to stabilize population dynamics due to the buffering effects of nonreproducing subordinates. However, competition for breeding positions in such species can also interfere with the reproduction of breeding pairs. 3. Seychelles magpie robins, Copsychus sechellarum, live in social groups w…

Male0106 biological sciencesConservation of Natural Resourcesmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationEndangered speciesBiologyExtinction BiologicalSeychelles010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCompetition (biology)SongbirdsSocial groupSexual Behavior AnimalCritically endangeredAnimalsSocial conflictPopulation GrowtheducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commoneducation.field_of_studyEcologyReproduction010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyMagpie-robinbiology.organism_classificationSocial DominanceSocial animalFemaleAnimal Science and ZoologyDemographyJournal of Animal Ecology
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Review Paper: Are reproductive skew models evolutionarily stable?

2003

Reproductive skew theory has become a popular way to phrase problems and test hypotheses of social evolution. The diversity of reproductive skew models probably stems from the ease of generating new variations. However, I show that the logical basis of skew models, that is, the way in which group formation is modelled, makes use of hidden assumptions that may be problematical as they are unlikely to be fulfilled in all social systems. I illustrate these problems by re-analysing the basic concessive skew model with staying incentives. First, the model assumes that dispersal is an all-or-nothing response: all subordinates disperse as soon as concessions drop below a certain value. This leads …

Value (ethics)education.field_of_studyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyPopulationSkewGeneral MedicineBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySocial groupSocial systemEconometricsSocial evolutionGeneral Agricultural and Biological ScienceseducationSocial psychologySelection (genetic algorithm)General Environmental ScienceDiversity (business)Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
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Alternative prey can change model-mimic dynamics between parasitism and mutualism

2003

Classical (conventional) Mullerian mimicry theory predicts that two (or more) defended prey sharing the same signal always benefit each other despite the fact that one species can be more toxic than the other. The quasi-Batesian (unconventional) mimicry theory, instead, predicts that the less defended partner of the mimetic relationship may act as a parasite of the signal, causing a fitness loss to the model. Here we clarify the conditions for parasitic or mutualistic relationships between aposematic prey, and build a model to examine the hypothesis that the availability of alternative prey is crucial to Mullerian and quasi-Batesian mimicry. Our model is based on optimal behaviour of the pr…

0106 biological sciencesMutualism (biology)0303 health sciencesSexual mimicryEcologyAposematismBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMüllerian mimicryPredation03 medical and health sciencesAggressive mimicryMimicryChemical mimicryEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyEcology Letters
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Figure S1;Figure S2 from Daphnia invest in sexual reproduction when its relative costs are reduced

2017

Figure S1. Occurrence of sexually reproducing females in the population with respect to asexual reproductive effort. Grey lines show the logistic regression within populations, whereas the pink line shows the logistic regression across populations. The inflection point (black line) indicates the threshold mean asexual reproductive effort (e2.44=11.47) at which the majority of populations contain females that carry a sexual clutch. Light grey dots show the raw data.;Figure S2. Temporal dynamics (day 1 = May 30, 2015) of (a) population density (Daphnia/L), (b) asexual reproductive effort, (c) population growth rate, and (d) the proportion of sexual females in the population. Each line shows o…

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Sex Allocation Theory for Facultatively Sexual Organisms Inhabiting Seasonal Environments: The Importance of Bet Hedging

2018

Adaptive explanations for dormancy often invoke bet hedging, where reduced mean fitness can be adaptive if it associates with reduced fitness variance. Sex allocation theory typically ignores variance effects and focuses on mean fitness. For many cyclical parthenogens, these themes become linked, as only sexually produced eggs undergo the dormancy needed to survive harsh conditions. We ask how sex allocation and the timing of sex evolve when this constraint exists in the form of a trade-off between asexual reproduction and sexual production of dormant eggs—the former being crucial for within-season success and the latter for survival across seasons. We show that male production can be tempo…

sex allocation10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicstiming of sexEcologyBehavior and SystematicsEvolution570 Life sciences; biology590 Animals (Zoology)facultative sexbet hedgingasukastiheys
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Sexually selected traits evolve positive allometry when some matings occur irrespective of the trait

2014

Positive allometry of secondary sexual traits (whereby larger individuals have disproportionally larger traits than smaller individuals) has been called one of the most pervasive and poorly understood regularities in the study of animal form and function. Its widespread occurrence is in contrast with theoretical predictions that it should evolve only under rather special circumstances. Using a combination of mathematical modeling and simulations, here we show that positive allometry is predicted to evolve under much broader conditions than previously recognized. This result hinges on the assumption that mating success is not necessarily zero for males with the lowest trait values: for examp…

body shapeexaggerated traits10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics1311 Geneticssukupuolivalinta570 Life sciences; biology590 Animals (Zoology)models/simulations1100 General Agricultural and Biological Sciencesbody sizesignalingdisplay traits
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Data from: Colour polymorphism torn apart by opposing positive frequency-dependent selection, yet maintained in space

2016

1. Polymorphic warning signals in aposematic species are enigmatic because predator learning and discrimination should select for the most common coloration, resulting in positive frequency-dependent survival selection. 2. Here, we investigated whether differential mating success could create sufficiently strong negative frequency-dependent selection for rare morphs to explain polymorphic (white and yellow) warning coloration in male wood tiger moths (Parasemia plantaginis). 3. We conducted an experiment in semi-natural conditions where we estimated mating success for both white and yellow male moths under three different morph frequencies. 4. Contrary to expectations, mating success was po…

medicine and health carefungiSpatial MosaicMedicineaposematismcolorationLife sciencesreproductive and urinary physiology
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Data from: Sex allocation theory for facultatively sexual organisms inhabiting seasonal environments: the importance of bet-hedging

2018

Adaptive explanations for dormancy often invoke bet-hedging, where reduced mean fitness can be adaptive if it associates with reduced fitness variance. Sex allocation theory typically ignores variance effects and focuses on mean fitness. For many cyclical parthenogens, these themes become linked, as only sexually produced eggs undergo dormancy needed to survive harsh conditions. We ask how sex allocation and the timing of sex evolve when this constraint exists in the form of a trade-off between asexual reproduction and sexual production of dormant eggs — the former being crucial for within-season success, the latter for survival across seasons. We show that male production can be temporally…

medicine and health careLife history: evolutionLife SciencesMedicineEcology: evolutionary
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Data from: Population-level consequences of risky dispersal

2015

Achieving sufficient connectivity between populations is essential for persistence, but costs of dispersal may select against individual traits or behaviours that, if present, would improve connectivity. Existing dispersal models tend to ignore the multitude of risks to individuals: while many assess the effect of mortality costs, there is also a risk of failing to find new habitat, especially when the entire inhabitable area remains both small and fragmented. There are few known rules governing whether individuals evolve to disperse more, or less, than what is ideal for population connectivity and persistence. Here we aim to fill this gap, while also noting that evolution might not only pr…

medicine and health carehypermobilityLife SciencesMedicineedge effectsinertiadispersal modelevolution of dispersal
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Data from: Daphnia females adjust sex allocation in response to current sex ratio and density

2019

Cyclical parthenogenesis presents an interesting challenge for the study of sex allocation, as individuals’ allocation decisions involve both the choice between sexual and asexual reproduction, and the choice between sons and daughters. Male production is therefore expected to depend on ecological and evolutionary drivers of overall investment in sex, and those influencing male reproductive value during sexual periods. We manipulated experimental populations, and made repeated observations of natural populations over their growing season, to disentangle effects of population density and the timing of sex from effects of adult sex ratio on sex allocation in cyclically parthenogenetic Daphnia…

sex allocationmedicine and health carecyclical parthenogenDaphnia magnaMedicinesex ratio adjustmentpopulation densityLife sciences
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Data from: Daphnia invest in sexual reproduction when its relative costs are reduced

2018

The timing of sex in facultatively sexual organisms is critical to fitness, due to the differing demographic consequences of sexual vs. asexual reproduction. In addition to the costs of sex itself, an association of sex with the production of dormant life stages also influences the optimal use of sex, especially in environments where resting eggs are essential to survive unfavourable conditions. Here we document population dynamics and the occurrence of sexual reproduction in natural populations of Daphnia magna across their growing season. The frequency of sexually reproducing females and males increased with population density and with decreasing asexual clutch sizes. The frequency of sex…

relative cost of sexmedicine and health careTiming of sexLife SciencesMedicinepopulation density
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Data from: Negative frequency-dependent selection of sexually antagonistic alleles in Myodes glareolus

2011

Sexually antagonistic genetic variation, where optimal values of traits are sex-dependent, is known to slow the loss of genetic variance associated with directional selection on fitness-related traits. However, sexual antagonism alone is not sufficient to maintain variation indefinitely. Selection of rare forms within the sexes can help to conserve genotypic diversity. We combined theoretical models and a field experiment with Myodes glareolus to show that negative frequency-dependent selection on male dominance maintains variation in sexually antagonistic alleles. In our experiment, high-dominance male bank voles were found to have low-fecundity sisters, and vice versa. These results show …

medicine and health carefrequency dependent selectionMammaliaMyodes glareolusMedicineRodentiasexually antagonistic selectionLife sciencesCricetidae
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Data from: Sexually selected traits evolve positive allometry when some matings occur irrespective of the trait

2013

Positive allometry of secondary sexual traits (whereby larger individuals have disproportionally larger traits than smaller individuals) has been called one of the most pervasive and poorly understood regularities in the study of animal form and function. Its widespread occurrence is in contrast with theoretical predictions that it should evolve only under rather special circumstances.

medicine and health careMedicineLife sciencesMating Systems
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