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PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Journal Abstract Search


127 related items for PubMed ID: 36622776

  • 1. Within-generation and transgenerational social plasticity interact during rapid adaptive evolution.
    Sturiale SL, Bailey NW.
    Evolution; 2023 Feb 04; 77(2):409-421. PubMed ID: 36622776
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  • 2. Direct and indirect effects of sexual signal loss on female reproduction in the Pacific field cricket (Teleogryllus oceanicus).
    Heinen-Kay JL, Strub DB, Balenger SL, Zuk M.
    J Evol Biol; 2019 Dec 04; 32(12):1382-1390. PubMed ID: 31495021
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  • 3. Sexual signal loss: The link between behaviour and rapid evolutionary dynamics in a field cricket.
    Zuk M, Bailey NW, Gray B, Rotenberry JT.
    J Anim Ecol; 2018 May 04; 87(3):623-633. PubMed ID: 29417997
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  • 5. Obligately silent males sire more offspring than singers in a rapidly evolving cricket population.
    Heinen-Kay JL, Urquhart EM, Zuk M.
    Biol Lett; 2019 Jul 26; 15(7):20190198. PubMed ID: 31362608
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  • 10. Sexual signal loss in field crickets maintained despite strong sexual selection favoring singing males.
    Tanner JC, Swanger E, Zuk M.
    Evolution; 2019 Jul 26; 73(7):1482-1489. PubMed ID: 31243769
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  • 11. Competing adaptations maintain nonadaptive variation in a wild cricket population.
    Rayner JG, Eichenberger F, Bainbridge JVA, Zhang S, Zhang X, Yusuf LH, Balenger S, Gaggiotti OE, Bailey NW.
    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A; 2024 Aug 06; 121(32):e2317879121. PubMed ID: 39088392
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  • 12. Behavioural plasticity compensates for adaptive loss of cricket song.
    Schneider WT, Rutz C, Bailey NW.
    Ecol Lett; 2024 Mar 06; 27(3):e14404. PubMed ID: 38519842
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  • 13. Testing the role of trait reversal in evolutionary diversification using song loss in wild crickets.
    Bailey NW, Pascoal S, Montealegre-Z F.
    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A; 2019 Apr 30; 116(18):8941-8949. PubMed ID: 30992379
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  • 14. Asymmetric mating preferences accommodated the rapid evolutionary loss of a sexual signal.
    Tinghitella RM, Zuk M.
    Evolution; 2009 Aug 30; 63(8):2087-98. PubMed ID: 19473387
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  • 15. Vestigial singing behaviour persists after the evolutionary loss of song in crickets.
    Schneider WT, Rutz C, Hedwig B, Bailey NW.
    Biol Lett; 2018 Feb 30; 14(2):. PubMed ID: 29445043
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  • 16. Rapid evolution and gene expression: a rapidly evolving Mendelian trait that silences field crickets has widespread effects on mRNA and protein expression.
    Pascoal S, Liu X, Ly T, Fang Y, Rockliffe N, Paterson S, Shirran SL, Botting CH, Bailey NW.
    J Evol Biol; 2016 Jun 30; 29(6):1234-46. PubMed ID: 26999731
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  • 17. Acoustic experience shapes alternative mating tactics and reproductive investment in male field crickets.
    Bailey NW, Gray B, Zuk M.
    Curr Biol; 2010 May 11; 20(9):845-9. PubMed ID: 20417103
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  • 18. Rapid convergent evolution in wild crickets.
    Pascoal S, Cezard T, Eik-Nes A, Gharbi K, Majewska J, Payne E, Ritchie MG, Zuk M, Bailey NW.
    Curr Biol; 2014 Jun 16; 24(12):1369-1374. PubMed ID: 24881880
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  • 19. Silent night: adaptive disappearance of a sexual signal in a parasitized population of field crickets.
    Zuk M, Rotenberry JT, Tinghitella RM.
    Biol Lett; 2006 Dec 22; 2(4):521-4. PubMed ID: 17148278
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  • 20. A novel cricket morph has diverged in song and wing morphology across island populations.
    Gallagher JH, Zonana DM, Broder ED, Syammach AM, Tinghitella RM.
    J Evol Biol; 2023 Nov 22; 36(11):1609-1617. PubMed ID: 37885146
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]


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