about
The social and ecological costs of an ‘over-extended' phenotypeQuantifying mating success of territorial males and sneakers in a bower-building cichlid fish.How do great bowerbirds construct perspective illusions?Raptor nest decorations are a reliable threat against conspecifics.Decoration supplementation and male-male competition in the great bowerbird (Ptilonorhynchus nuchalis): a test of the social control hypothesis.The evolution of novel animal signals: silk decorations as a model system.The design and function of birds' nestsScent marking increases male reproductive success in wild house miceThe relative effectiveness of signaling systems: relying on external items reduces signaling accuracy while leks increase accuracy.Alternative reproductive tactics in snail shell-brooding cichlids diverge in energy reserve allocation.Decoration Increases the Conspicuousness of Raptor Nests.Male great bowerbirds create forced perspective illusions with consistently different individual qualityEffects of salinity on nest-building behaviour in a marine fish.Altering an extended phenotype reduces intraspecific male aggression and can maintain diversity in cichlid fish.Environmental change mediates mate choice for an extended phenotype, but not for mate quality.Grief functions as an honest indicator of commitment.Does the whistling thorn acacia (Acacia drepanolobium) use auditory aposematism to deter mammalian herbivores?Female stickleback prefer shallow males: Sexual selection on nest microhabitat.Nest design in a changing world: great tit Parus major nests from a Mediterranean city environment as a case study.'The thieving magpie'? No evidence for attraction to shiny objects.Body size mediates social and environmental effects on nest building behaviour in a fish with paternal care.Visual effects in great bowerbird sexual displays and their implications for signal design.Simple rules for construction of a geometric nest structure by pufferfishNest as an extended phenotype signal of female quality in the great reed warbler
P2860
Q27325544-5B28B467-412D-4756-8BE9-76A4BD64CF54Q28818140-B72553CD-6390-428D-B7BF-5B69EF16A1D5Q30839410-783403B3-B696-4FE4-94B6-8C0487ED44EDQ34160076-41B1987D-F037-4426-A960-97886B8D680AQ34188924-220D18AE-708F-4260-A758-105F652B314EQ34252474-618E9C0F-78BF-4A3E-BE8B-1C95A04A59ECQ34565879-CECF68C2-55E9-4E44-9176-54A1575C991CQ34790269-0DC6A24A-2FBC-492F-B118-3404AD11AFBEQ35120156-42B3D237-F148-4465-ACEB-724F2C806C47Q35667469-0472030D-88C4-4282-9E95-DEC5E7FFDE6FQ36084896-F3D8A34C-D370-4794-A465-C409410B3FC8Q36485088-2C61B14C-32C4-4434-AB1F-7124DF222D37Q36634270-89516CF3-608C-47B5-80EC-66D4867E37D3Q37354514-9C519AC3-D9EB-469E-AEB8-7DE432C1BFDFQ37631942-DBF48350-49E9-45FE-8669-1BEE7E097427Q39255357-756DD9EB-11F8-4F0E-856C-5291EDEFF435Q39643158-B0639100-30F6-4E3C-98C9-0C9258A263B1Q41244678-58A4D14E-064D-4E8F-82FC-8A1568287D58Q46243366-3F173BF9-B5AE-4DA4-9A00-B1812C39BD40Q46852124-9F6E1653-E958-41A5-B5E6-FC554C657EB8Q47404797-E947DA54-3C5D-4633-956A-FC498803B225Q51455541-42C6CA45-29AC-436F-BEB6-33FFC0317EC1Q57094415-9313109E-D9D4-4BB6-A200-AD2EFC07201FQ58890482-8268BE92-F7DB-423B-9A55-1ABED3DBA940
P2860
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on May 2009
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
@da
vědecký článek
@cs
name
Extended phenotypes as signals.
@en
Extended phenotypes as signals.
@nl
type
label
Extended phenotypes as signals.
@en
Extended phenotypes as signals.
@nl
prefLabel
Extended phenotypes as signals.
@en
Extended phenotypes as signals.
@nl
P2860
P1433
P1476
Extended phenotypes as signals.
@en
P2093
Franziska C Schaedelin
P2860
P304
P356
10.1111/J.1469-185X.2008.00075.X
P577
2009-05-01T00:00:00Z