(Paperback)
By: Marc Mangel
ISBN: 9780691085067
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Jan 1989
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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This book describes a powerful and flexible technique for modeling of behavior, based on evolutionary principles.
(Paperback)
By: William Eberhard
ISBN: 9780691010847
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Jul 1996
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Many evidences have begun to reveal flaws in the assumption of female passivity and lack of discrimination after copulation has begun. This book features research on the ability of females to shape the outcome of mating. It also describes studies of cryptic mechanisms by which a female can accept a male for copulation but reject him as a father.
(Paperback)
By: David W. Stephens
ISBN: 9780691084428
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Publication Date: Mar 1987
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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(Paperback)
By: Steven A. Frank
ISBN: 9780691059341
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Jul 1998
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Treats one of the central problems in evolutionary biology, the evolution of social cooperation and conflict. This book tackles the problem with an original combination of approaches: game theory, classical models of natural selection, quantitative genetics, and kin selection.
(Hardback)
By: Thomas D. Seeley
ISBN: 9780691639352
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Readership/Audience: Tertiary Education
Publication Date: Apr 2016
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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(Paperback)
By: Elizabeth Adkins-Regan
ISBN: 9780691092478
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Aug 2005
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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A guide to the connections between animal social behavior and steroid and peptide hormones. It emphasizes concepts and principles, hypothesis testing, and critical thinking. It also features studies of a variety of wild and domestic vertebrates along with some of the important invertebrate discoveries.
(Paperback)
By: Laurent Keller
ISBN: 9780691007045
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Oct 1999
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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One of the problems of biology is: what keeps competition between the various levels of natural selection from destroying the common interests to be gained from cooperation In this volume twelve scientists explore this question, presenting a survey of the current theoretical and empirical research in evolutionary biology.
(Paperback)
By: Stephen M. Shuster
ISBN: 9780691049311
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Publication Date: May 2003
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Presents a conceptual and statistical framework for understanding the evolution of reproductive strategies. Using the concept of the opportunity for sexual selection, this book illustrates how and why sexual selection, though restricted to one sex and opposed in the other, is one of the strongest and fastest of all evolutionary forces.
(Paperback)
By: Lee Alan Dugatkin
ISBN: 9780691006536
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Oct 2001
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Features researchers, who describe why they chose their systems, how they integrate theoretical, conceptual, and empirical work, lessons for the practice of the discipline, and potential avenues of future research. This book offers a "systems" focus and insights into the confluence of personal curiosity and scientific inquiry.
(Paperback)
By: Magnus Enquist
ISBN: 9780691096339
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Sep 2005
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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How can we make better sense of animal behavior by using what we know about the brain This book attempts to answer this question by applying neural network theory. It shows how scientists can employ ANNs to analyze animal behavior, explores the general principles of the nervous systems, and tests potential generalizations among species.
(Paperback)
By: Paul Schmid-Hempel
ISBN: 9780691059242
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Nov 1998
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Analyzes how parasites shape the biology of social insects: the ants, wasps, bees, and termites. This book places the issues such as division of labor, genetics, immunology, and epidemiology in a common framework to examine two of the most successful adaptations of life: parasitism and sociality.
(Paperback)
By: H. Charles J. Godfray
ISBN: 9780691000473
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Jan 1994
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Providing an introduction to parasitoid natural history and taxonomy, this book asks how a consideration of evolutionary biology can help us understand the behavior, ecology, and diversity of the approximately one to two million species of parasitoid found on earth. It also discusses the theoretical background to the subject.
(Paperback)
By: William A. Searcy
ISBN: 9780691601076
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Readership/Audience: Tertiary Education
Publication Date: Jul 2014
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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(Paperback)
By: Anne E. Houde
ISBN: 9780691027890
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Aug 1997
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Describes the sexual behavior of guppies and examines how mate choice by females leads to the evolution of the conspicuous colors and the courtship displays for which guppies are recognized. The author explores the implications of her findings for behavioral ecologists who study sexual selection in other species.
(Paperback)
By: Gran Arnqvist
ISBN: 9780691122182
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Jul 2005
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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The recognition of conflict between the sexes is transforming our theories for the evolution of mating systems and the sexes themselves Written by two top researchers in the field, this is the first book to describe this transformation. It is a must read for all scholars and students interested in the evolutionary biology of reproduction.
(Paperback)
By: Malte Andersson
ISBN: 9780691000572
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Jun 1994
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Providing a synthesis of sexual selection, this work describes the theory and its development; examines models, methods, and empirical tests; and identifies unsolved problems. It discusses such topics as the selection and evolution of mating preferences; relations between sexual selection and speciation; constraints on sexual selection; and more.
(Paperback)
By: Andrew F.G. Bourke
ISBN: 9780691044262
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Nov 1995
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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The self-sacrifice of sterile workers in ant colonies has been particularly difficult for evolutionary biologists to explain. This title presents an overview of the scientific knowledge about social evolution in ants. It shows how studies on ants have contributed to an understanding of many fundamental topics in behavioral ecology.
(Paperback)
By: Luc-Alain Giraldeau
ISBN: 9780691048772
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Publication Date: Jun 2000
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Focuses on the ways in which animals search and compete for food in groups. This book identifies social foraging as an economic interaction between the actions of individuals and those of other foragers. It is of interest to researchers and graduate students in such areas as behavioral ecology, population ecology, and wildlife management.
(Paperback)
By: Leigh W. Simmons
ISBN: 9780691059884
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Nov 2001
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Analyzes theoretical and empirical work on insect sperm competition. This work considers both male and female interests in sperm utilization and the sexual conflict that can arise when these differ. It covers the mechanics of sperm transfer and utilization, morphology, physiology, and behavior.
(Paperback)
By: Scott Creel
ISBN: 9780691016542
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Publication Date: Jun 2002
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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This work is based on a six year study of African wild dogs, lycaon pictus, in Tanzania's Selous Game Reserve, the largest protected area in Africa and one of the least-studied.
(Paperback)
By: William A. Searcy
ISBN: 9780691070957
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Publication Date: Sep 2005
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Gull chicks beg for food from their parents. Peacocks spread their tails to attract potential mates. Meerkats alert family members of the approach of predators. But are these sometimes dishonest This book probes such question by reviewing the empirical data and game theory models available, and by asking how well theory matches data.
(Paperback)
By: Tim H. Clutton-Brock
ISBN: 9780691025162
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Readership/Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publication Date: Mar 1991
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Synthesizing studies of parental care in a wide variety of animals, this book provides general answers to the following important questions: Why does the extent of parental care vary so widely between species Why do only females care for eggs and young in some animals, only males in others, and both parents in a few
(Hardback)
By: Brian C.R. Bertram
ISBN: 9780691630137
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Readership/Audience: Tertiary Education
Publication Date: Jun 2016
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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(Paperback)
By: Brian C.R. Bertram
ISBN: 9780691600161
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Readership/Audience: Tertiary Education
Publication Date: Jul 2014
Publisher: Princeton University Press
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As the study of cooperative breeding systems expands, a number of key species form the examples that underpin our general understanding. The ostrich is increasingly becoming such a textbook species, on the basis of the results obtained in Brian Bertram's study of vigilance and egg discrimination in this extraordinary bird. Here Bertram presents new
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