Partial begging: an empirical model for the early evolution of offspring signalling.
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Correlated evolution in parental care in females but not males in response to selection on paternity assurance behaviourAntimicrobial strategies in burying beetles breeding on carrion.Major benefits of guarding behavior in subsocial bees: implications for social evolution.Exploration behaviour is not associated with chick provisioning in great tits.Female burying beetles benefit from male desertion: sexual conflict and counter-adaptation over parental investment.What are the benefits of parental care? The importance of parental effects on developmental rateOctopaminergic gene expression and flexible social behaviour in the subsocial burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides.Feces production as a form of social immunity in an insect with facultative maternal care.Provisioning mass by females of the maritime earwig, Anisolabis maritima, is not adjusted based on the number of youngParental effects alter the adaptive value of an adult behavioural trait.Parental care buffers against inbreeding depression in burying beetles.When it is costly to have a caring mother: food limitation erases the benefits of parental care in earwigs.Transcriptomes of parents identify parenting strategies and sexual conflict in a subsocial beetle.Are species differences in maternal effects arising from maternal care adaptive?Gut Microbiota Colonization and Transmission in the Burying Beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides throughout Development.Parental effects and flight behaviour in the burying beetle, Nicrophorus vespilloides.The Genome and Methylome of a Beetle with Complex Social Behavior, Nicrophorus vespilloides (Coleoptera: Silphidae).A hormone-related female anti-aphrodisiac signals temporary infertility and causes sexual abstinence to synchronize parental care.The role of neuropeptide F in a transition to parental care.The quantitative genetics of sex differences in parenting.From facultative to obligatory parental care: Interspecific variation in offspring dependency on post-hatching care in burying beetlesEvolution of elaborate parental care: phenotypic and genetic correlations between parent and offspring traits.Asynchronous hatching in the burying beetle, Nicrophorus quadripunctatus, maxmizes parental fitness.Late-life and intergenerational effects of larval exposure to microbial competitors in the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides.Parents influence asymmetric sibling competition: experimental evidence with partially dependent young.Females manipulate behavior of caring males via prenatal maternal effects.Control of parental investment changes plastically over time with residual reproductive value.Negative association between parental care and sibling cooperation in earwigs: a new perspective on the early evolution of family life?Male burying beetles extend, not reduce, parental care duration when reproductive competition is high.Difference in parenting in two species of burying beetle, Nicrophorus orbicollis and Nicrophorus vespilloidesIntergenerational effects of inbreeding in Nicrophorus vespilloides: offspring suffer fitness costs when either they or their parents are inbred.Sibling competition does not exacerbate inbreeding depression in the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides.Asynchronous hatching provides females with a means for increasing male care but incurs a cost by reducing offspring fitness.State-dependent cooperation in burying beetles: parents adjust their contribution towards care based on both their own and their partner's size.Post-hatching parental care masks the effects of egg size on offspring fitness: a removal experiment on burying beetles.Gut microbiota in the burying beetle, Nicrophorus vespilloides, provide colonization resistance against larval bacterial pathogens.Bigger mothers are better mothers: disentangling size-related prenatal and postnatal maternal effects.The influence of maternal effects on indirect benefits associated with polyandry.Evolution of parental care driven by mutual reinforcement of parental food provisioning and sibling competition.Interaction between parental care and sibling competition: parents enhance offspring growth and exacerbate sibling competition.
P2860
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P2860
Partial begging: an empirical model for the early evolution of offspring signalling.
description
2003 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2003年の論文
@ja
2003年学术文章
@wuu
2003年学术文章
@zh
2003年学术文章
@zh-cn
2003年学术文章
@zh-hans
2003年学术文章
@zh-my
2003年学术文章
@zh-sg
2003年學術文章
@yue
2003年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Partial begging: an empirical model for the early evolution of offspring signalling.
@en
Partial begging: an empirical model for the early evolution of offspring signalling.
@nl
type
label
Partial begging: an empirical model for the early evolution of offspring signalling.
@en
Partial begging: an empirical model for the early evolution of offspring signalling.
@nl
prefLabel
Partial begging: an empirical model for the early evolution of offspring signalling.
@en
Partial begging: an empirical model for the early evolution of offspring signalling.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
Partial begging: an empirical model for the early evolution of offspring signalling.
@en
P2093
Allen J Moore
Clive T Darwell
Per T Smiseth
P2860
P304
P356
10.1098/RSPB.2003.2444
P577
2003-09-01T00:00:00Z