نتایج جستجو برای: poecilia sphenops

تعداد نتایج: 1070  

Journal: :Biology letters 2008
Rüdiger Riesch Ingo Schlupp Martin Plath

In sperm-dependent sexual/asexual mating systems, male mate choice is critical for understanding the mechanisms behind apparent stability observed in natural populations. The gynogenetic Amazon molly (Poecilia formosa) requires sperm from sexual males (e.g. Poecilia latipinna) to trigger embryogenesis, but inheritance is strictly maternal. Consequently, males should try to avoid or reduce the c...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2016
Kate L Laskowski Max Wolf David Bierbach

Across a wide range of animal taxa, winners of previous fights are more likely to keep winning future contests, just as losers are more likely to keep losing. At present, such winner and loser effects are considered to be fairly transient. However, repeated experiences with winning and/or losing might increase the persistence of these effects, generating long-lasting consequences for social str...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Laura Alberici da Barbiano Zachariah Gompert Andrea S Aspbury Caitlin R Gabor Chris C Nice

Unisexual sperm-dependent vertebrates are of hybrid origins, rare, and predicted to be short-lived as a result of several challenges arising from their mode of reproduction. In particular, because of a lack of recombination, clonal species are predicted to have a low potential to respond to natural selection. However, many unisexual sperm-dependent species persist, and assessing the genetic div...

2017
Stefanie Gierszewski Klaus Müller Ievgen Smielik Jan-Marco Hütwohl Klaus-Dieter Kuhnert Klaudia Witte

The use of computer animation in behavioral research is a state-of-the-art method for designing and presenting animated animals to live test animals. The major advantages of computer animations are: (1) the creation of animated animal stimuli with high variability of morphology and even behavior; (2) animated stimuli provide highly standardized, controlled and repeatable testing procedures; and...

Journal: :Behavioural processes 2010
A M Makowicz M Plath I Schlupp

Sexual conflict in poeciliid fishes is well-documented, particularly male sexual harassment and its effects on females. For instance, male attempts to force copulations influence female feeding, energy allocation, and preference for shoaling partners. However, there has been little research conducted to determine how the social environment shapes the occurrence and intensity of sexual harassmen...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2014
Bonnie A Fraser Ilana Janowitz Margaret Thairu Joseph Travis Kimberly A Hughes

A major goal of modern evolutionary biology is to understand the causes and consequences of phenotypic plasticity, the ability of a single genotype to produce multiple phenotypes in response to variable environments. While ecological and quantitative genetic studies have evaluated models of the evolution of adaptive plasticity, some long-standing questions about plasticity require more mechanis...

2004
C. M. TIMMERMAN L. J. CHAPMAN

Variation in respiratory traits was quantified between two populations of the sailfin molly Poecilia latipinna (one from a periodically hypoxic salt marsh, Cedar Key, and one from a chronically normoxic river site, Santa Fe River). Two suites of characters were selected: traits that may show both short-term acclimation response and interdemic variation in acclimation response (metabolic rate, c...

2017
David Bierbach Kate L Laskowski Max Wolf

Behavioural individuality is thought to be caused by differences in genes and/or environmental conditions. Therefore, if these sources of variation are removed, individuals are predicted to develop similar phenotypes lacking repeatable individual variation. Moreover, even among genetically identical individuals, direct social interactions are predicted to be a powerful factor shaping the develo...

2002
KLAUDIA WITTE MICHAEL J. RYAN

Mate choice copying has been documented extensively in the laboratory with almost no supporting data available from studies in the wild. We investigated male and female mate choice copying in a wild population of the sailfin molly, a species that shows copying in the laboratory. We set up two upside-down plastic tanks in a river, with two jars of water on each tank. In male mate choice trials w...

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