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An expressed sequence tag (EST) library for Drosophila serrata, a model system for sexual selection and climatic adaptation studiesThe pdm3 Locus Is a Hotspot for Recurrent Evolution of Female-Limited Color Dimorphism in Drosophila.Pleiotropic mutations are subject to strong stabilizing selection.Sex-specific patterns of morphological diversification: evolution of reaction norms and static allometries in neriid flies.Characterizing the evolution of genetic variance using genetic covariance tensors.The nature and extent of mutational pleiotropy in gene expression of male Drosophila serrata.Single-Molecule Sequencing of the Drosophila serrata Genome.The phenome-wide distribution of genetic variance.Quantitative genetic variation for thermal performance curves within and among natural populations of Drosophila serrata.Polymorphisms in a desaturase 2 ortholog associate with cuticular hydrocarbon and male mating success variation in a natural population of Drosophila serrata.The genomic distribution of sex-biased genes in drosophila serrata: X chromosome demasculinization, feminization, and hyperexpression in both sexes.Sex-specific fitness consequences of nutrient intake and the evolvability of diet preferences.The contribution of spontaneous mutations to thermal sensitivity curve variation in Drosophila serrata.Sex-biased transcriptome divergence along a latitudinal gradient.Testing the correlated response hypothesis for the evolution and maintenance of male mating preferences in Drosophila serrata.Family level variation in Wolbachia-mediated dengue virus blocking in Aedes aegypti.Sexual selection on spontaneous mutations strengthens the between-sex genetic correlation for fitness.Oceanic interchange and nonequilibrium population structure in the estuarine dependent Indo-Pacific tasselfish, Polynemus sheridani.Genomic Evidence that Sexual Selection Impedes Adaptation to a Novel Environment.The B-matrix harbors significant and sex-specific constraints on the evolution of multicharacter sexual dimorphism.The evolutionary stability of cross-sex, cross-trait genetic covariances.Stronger convex (stabilizing) selection on homologous sexual display traits in females than in males: a multipopulation comparison in Drosophila serrata.Interspecific divergence of transcription networks along lines of genetic variance in Drosophila: dimensionality, evolvability, and constraint.The relative importance of genetic and nongenetic inheritance in relation to trait plasticity in Callosobruchus maculatus.Polyandry and paternity skew in natural and experimental populations of Drosophila serrata.Comparing complex fitness surfaces: among-population variation in mutual sexual selection in Drosophila serrata.Can non-directional male mating preferences facilitate honest female ornamentation?Zebrafish take their cue from temperature but not photoperiod for the seasonal plasticity of thermal performance.Orientation of the genetic variance-covariance matrix and the fitness surface for multiple male sexually selected traits.Q(St) meets the G matrix: the dimensionality of adaptive divergence in multiple correlated quantitative traits.Clines in cuticular hydrocarbons in two Drosophila species with independent population histories.The contribution of selection and genetic constraints to phenotypic divergence.Connecting thermal performance curve variation to the genotype: a multivariate QTL approach.Testing for a genetic response to sexual selection in a wild Drosophila population.A Genomic Reference Panel for Drosophila serrata.When oceans meet: a teleost shows secondary intergradation at an Indian-Pacific interface.Genetic constraints on microevolutionary divergence of sex-biased gene expressionPhenotypic divergence along lines of genetic varianceStrong genetic structuring in a habitat specialist, the oxleyan pygmy perch nannoperca oxleyana
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description
researcher
@en
name
Stephen F Chenoweth
@en
Stephen F Chenoweth
@nl
type
label
Stephen F Chenoweth
@en
Stephen F Chenoweth
@nl
prefLabel
Stephen F Chenoweth
@en
Stephen F Chenoweth
@nl
P106
P31
P496
0000-0002-8303-9159