about
Banded mongooses avoid inbreeding when mating with members of the same natal groupLack of aggression and apparent altruism towards intruders in a primitive termiteSources of variation in cuticular hydrocarbons in the ant Formica exsecta.Explaining negative kin discrimination in a cooperative mammal society.Inbreeding and reproductive investment in the ant Formica exsecta.Oxidative stress and life histories: unresolved issues and current needs.Elevated glucocorticoid concentrations during gestation predict reduced reproductive success in subordinate female banded mongoosesFemale reproductive competition explains variation in prenatal investment in wild banded mongoosesVariable ecological conditions promote male helping by changing banded mongoose group compositionLifetime fitness consequences of early-life ecological hardship in a wild mammal population.Oxidative shielding and the cost of reproduction.Natal Dispersal, Mating Patterns, and Inbreeding in the Ant Formica exsecta.Eider females form non-kin brood-rearing coalitions.Conspecific ant aggression is correlated with chemical distance, but not with genetic or spatial distance.Telomere dynamics in wild banded mongooses: Evaluating longitudinal and quasi-longitudinal markers of senescence.Data collection and storage in long-term ecological and evolutionary studies: The Mongoose 2000 system.Smelling fit: scent marking exposes parasitic infection status in the banded mongoose.Intragroup competition predicts individual foraging specialisation in a group-living mammal.Biased escorts: offspring sex, not relatedness explains alloparental care patterns in a cooperative breeder.Do cuticular hydrocarbons provide sufficient information for optimal sex allocation in the ant Formica exsecta?Chemical basis of nest-mate discrimination in the ant Formica exsecta.Decoupling of Genetic and Cultural Inheritance in a Wild MammalDemography and Social Evolution of Banded MongoosesLive long and prosper: durable benefits of early-life care in banded mongoosesDeveloping differences: early-life effects and evolutionary medicineSpontaneous abortion as a response to reproductive conflict in the banded mongoose
P50
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P50
description
hulumtuese
@sq
researcher
@en
wetenschapper
@nl
հետազոտող
@hy
name
Emma Vitikainen
@ast
Emma Vitikainen
@en
Emma Vitikainen
@es
Emma Vitikainen
@nl
Emma Vitikainen
@sl
type
label
Emma Vitikainen
@ast
Emma Vitikainen
@en
Emma Vitikainen
@es
Emma Vitikainen
@nl
Emma Vitikainen
@sl
altLabel
Emma I. K. Vitikainen
@en
prefLabel
Emma Vitikainen
@ast
Emma Vitikainen
@en
Emma Vitikainen
@es
Emma Vitikainen
@nl
Emma Vitikainen
@sl
P108
P1053
F-2099-2010
P106
P1153
12764959000
P21
P2798
P31
P3829
P496
0000-0003-3718-0941