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  • Search: subject:"kin recognition"
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kin recognition 6 parental care 2 Argentine ants 1 Emberiza schoeniclus 1 Linepithema humile 1 Mungos mungo 1 aggression 1 cooperative breeding 1 discrimination 1 dispersal 1 extrapair paternity 1 helpers 1 inbreeding 1 inbreeding avoidance 1 inbreeding depression 1 incest avoidance 1 kin selection 1 mandrills 1 nepotism 1 paternity analysis 1 pedigree 1 provisioning 1 recognition errors 1 relatedness 1 reproductive skew 1 sib-mating 1 unicoloniality 1
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Undetermined 6
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Article 6
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Bensch, Staffan 1 Bernasconi, Christian 1 Bouwman, Karen M. 1 C(Kate). M. Lessells 1 Chapuisat, Michel 1 Charpentier, Marie 1 Christians, Julian K. 1 Gilchrist, Jason S. 1 Gimenez, Olivier 1 Hansson, Bengt 1 Hasselquist, Dennis 1 Hoehn, Sophie 1 Hossaert-McKey, Martine 1 Jack, Lucy 1 Keller, Laurent 1 Komdeur, Jan 1 Peignot, Patricia 1 Pemberton, Josephine M. 1 Reuter, Max 1 Setchell, Joanna M. 1 Westerdahl, Helena 1 Wickings, E. Jean 1 Åkesson, Mikael 1
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Behavioral Ecology 6
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RePEc 6
Showing 1 - 6 of 6
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No evidence for inbreeding avoidance in a great reed warbler population
Hansson, Bengt; Jack, Lucy; Christians, Julian K.; … - In: Behavioral Ecology 18 (2007) 1, pp. 157-164
Inbreeding depression may drive the evolution of inbreeding avoidance through dispersal and mate choice. In birds, many species show female-biased dispersal, which is an effective inbreeding avoidance mechanism. In contrast, there is scarce evidence in birds for kin discriminative mate choice,...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008581856
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Male reed buntings do not adjust parental effort in relation to extrapair paternity
Bouwman, Karen M.; C(Kate). M. Lessells; Komdeur, Jan - In: Behavioral Ecology 16 (2005) 3, pp. 499-506
Parental effort is considered to be costly; therefore, males are expected to provide less care to unrelated offspring. Theoretical models suggest that males should either reduce their care to the entire brood or alternatively distinguish between related and unrelated nestlings and direct...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008581363
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Constraints on control: factors influencing reproductive success in male mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx)
Charpentier, Marie; Peignot, Patricia; Hossaert-McKey, … - In: Behavioral Ecology 16 (2005) 3, pp. 614-623
dominant and subordinate adult males increased. These two last points suggests particularly that mechanisms of kin recognition …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008581717
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Nestmate recognition in the unicolonial ant Formica paralugubris
Chapuisat, Michel; Bernasconi, Christian; Hoehn, Sophie; … - In: Behavioral Ecology 16 (2005) 1, pp. 15-19
In unicolonial populations of ants, individuals can mix freely within large networks of nests that contain many queens. It has been proposed that the absence of aggression in unicolonial populations stems from a loss of nest mate recognition, but few studies have tested this hypothesis. We...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008581841
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Pup escorting in the communal breeding banded mongoose: behavior, benefits, and maintenance
Gilchrist, Jason S. - In: Behavioral Ecology 15 (2004) 6, pp. 952-960
In cooperatively breeding species, helpers typically provide food to offspring, and distribute food throughout the brood or litter. However, in the communal breeding banded mongoose (Mungos mungo), some group members escort individual pups during their period of dependence, and escorts...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008581704
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Lack of inbreeding avoidance in the Argentine ant Linepithema humile
Keller, Laurent - In: Behavioral Ecology 13 (2002) 1, pp. 28-31
consistent with the view that kin recognition mediated solely by genetic cues might be intrinsically error prone within colonies …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008581893
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