Search Results - "Nolan Jr, Val"
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Adaptation, Exaptation, and Constraint: A Hormonal Perspective
Published in The American naturalist (01-07-1999)“…We approach conceptual issues in evolutionary biology from an endocrinological perspective, noting that single hormones typically act on several target tissues…”
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Acorn mast drives long-term dynamics of rodent and songbird populations
Published in Oecologia (01-12-2007)“…Resource pulses can have cascading effects on the dynamics of multiple trophic levels. Acorn mast is a pulsed resource in oak-dominated forests that has…”
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Consequences of elevating plasma testosterone in females of a socially monogamous songbird: evidence of constraints on male evolution?
Published in Hormones and behavior (01-08-2004)“…To explore whether selection for testosterone-mediated traits in males might be constrained by costs of higher testosterone to females, we examined the effects…”
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more informative method for analyzing reproductive success
Published in Journal of field ornithology (01-12-2007)“…Few investigators have examined how a female's prior history (i.e., number of clutches laid previously and whether those nesting attempts were successful or…”
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Influence of Exogenous Testosterone on the Dynamics of Nestling Provisioning in Dark-Eyed Juncos
Published in Ethology (2007)“…In many songbird species, application of exogenous testosterone (T) during the breeding season has the general effects of reducing male parental investment and…”
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Elevated testosterone reduces choosiness in female dark–eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis): evidence for a hormonal constraint on sexual selection?
Published in Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences (07-07-2004)“…), we tested whether experimentally enhancing female T would lead to a decrease in discrimination between two classes of males, one treated with T (T–males)…”
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Mouth Color Signals Thermal State of Nestling Dark-Eyed Juncos (Junco hyemalis)
Published in Ethology (01-02-2003)“…In many species of birds, nestlings have brightly colored mouths. Some studies have found that mouth color is related to hunger, and may serve to solicit…”
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Testosterone Manipulation of Male Attractiveness has no Detectable Effect on Female Home-Range Size and Behavior During the Fertile Period
Published in Ethology (01-08-2002)“…Female dark‐eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis) are socially monogamous, but they engage in extra‐pair copulations (EPCs). We examined spatial activity and behavior…”
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The Effects of Experimentally Elevated Testosterone and Food Deprivation on Food Consumption and Prey Size Preferences in Male Dark-Eyed Juncos (Junco hyemalis, Emberizidae: Passeriformes)
Published in Ethology (01-05-2001)“…Numerous studies have shown that the experimental elevation of circulating levels of testosterone reduces parental behaviour in male birds, particularly the…”
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CORRELATIONAL SELECTION LEADS TO GENETIC INTEGRATION OF BODY SIZE AND AN ATTRACTIVE PLUMAGE TRAIT IN DARK-EYED JUNCOS
Published in Evolution (01-03-2005)“…When a trait's effect on fitness depends on its interaction with other traits, the resultant selection is correlational and may lead to the integration of…”
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Effects of testosterone on use of space by male dark-eyed juncos when their mates are fertile
Published in Animal behaviour (01-09-1997)“…Testosterone is an important determinant of spatial activity in male birds. Using radiotelemetry, male dark-eyed juncos,Junco hyemaliswere followed during the…”
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Steroid Hormones and Immune Function: Experimental Studies in Wild and Captive Dark‐Eyed Juncos (Junco hyemalis)
Published in The American naturalist (01-04-2001)“…Monogamous and polygynous male songbirds generally differ in their breeding season profiles of circulating testosterone. Testosterone level spikes early in the…”
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Hormones and Life Histories: An Integrative Approach
Published in The American naturalist (01-11-1992)“…This article, which focuses on hormones and the diverse effects they have on behavior and physiology, raises evolutionary questions that hormonal studies…”
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The Evolution of Clutch Size. I. An Equation for Predicting Clutch Size
Published in Evolution (01-12-1989)“…We derive an equation for calculating the clutch sizes of birds and other long-lived animals from Murray's (1979) theory on the evolution of clutch size. For…”
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Female ornamentation and male mate choice in dark-eyed juncos
Published in Animal behaviour (2004)“…Traits that enhance attractiveness in one sex may or may not influence attractiveness in the other. In the dark-eyed junco, Junco hyemalis, outer tail feathers…”
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Testosterone increases activity but not daily energy expenditure in captive male dark-eyed juncos, Junco hyemalis
Published in Animal behaviour (01-11-2000)“…Plasma testosterone (T) levels in male dark-eyed juncos peak early in the breeding season, then decline. If T enhances opportunities for reproductive success,…”
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Offspring Sex Ratio Is Unrelated to Male Attractiveness in Dark-Eyed Juncos (Junco hyemalis)
Published in Behavioral ecology and sociobiology (01-09-2001)“…Sex allocation theory predicts that parents should bias investment toward the offspring sex that confers higher relative fitness on the parents. When variance…”
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Effects of Experimentally Elevated Testosterone on Plasma Corticosterone and Corticosteroid-Binding Globulin in Dark-Eyed Juncos ( Junco hyemalis)
Published in General and comparative endocrinology (01-10-1997)“…An earlier study of free-living male dark-eyed juncos found an increase in plasma corticosterone (B) in response to experimental elevation of plasma…”
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Influence of experimentally elevated testosterone on nest defence in dark-eyed juncos
Published in Animal behaviour (01-09-1998)“…Testosterone affects the allocation of reproductive effort in male birds. Elevated testosterone causes male dark-eyed juncos,Junco hyemalis, to decrease care…”
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