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"Density-dependent male mating harassment, female resistance and male mimicry"
Thomas P. Gosden and Erik I. Svensson


male blue-tailed damselfly matting with his doppelganger

A male mating with his female doppelganger (photo: Erik Svensson) 

Females in the blue-tailed damselfly (Ischnura elegans) occur in three different inherited color forms: green, red, and blue, with the blue form looking confusingly similar to males, perhaps to avoid repeated excessive sexual harassment. By dusting the males with a fluorescent powder, the authors monitored both the intensity of male mating harassment and the number of matings of the three female forms. The avoidance through male mimicry only seems to benefit the females when their “more attractive” sisters are at higher densities.

Press Release

Snapshot of Speciation
Study catches two bird populations as they split into seperate species

A new study finds that a change in a single gene has sent two closely related bird populations on their way to becoming two distinct species. The study, published in the August issue of The American Naturalist, is one of only a few to investigate the specific genetic changes that drive two populations toward speciation.

Parasites May Help Keep Sex On Top

What’s so great about sex? From an evolutionary perspective, the answer is not as obvious as one might think. An article published in the July issue of The American Naturalist suggests that sex may have evolved in part as a defense against parasites.

Michael J. Wade to Receive 2009 Sewall Wright Award

Harvard Biologist Jonathan Losos to Receive 2009 E. O. Wilson Naturalist Award

In the News

Featured in ScienceNOW
"On the Road to a New Species" June 15, 2009
Difference in Plumage Color Used in Species Recognition between Incipient Species Is Linked to a Single Amino Acid Substitution in the Melanocortin‐1 Receptor
J. Albert C. Uy, Robert G. Moyle, Christopher E. Filardi, and Zachary A. Cheviron, Associate Editor: Ben C. Sheldon, Editor: Monica A. Geber
Next, the researchers evaluated whether this color change might make any difference to the birds. They put stuffed birds of either color into the territories of live flycatchers. Flycatchers are not bothered by most foreign birds, but they will attack potential rivals of the same species. Black bird decoys drew angry responses from black birds but little reaction from brown-belly birds and vice versa, Uy and his colleagues report in the August issue of The American Naturalist.

May 2007

Volume 169, Number 5
Am Nat 2007. Vol. 169, pp. 673–683
0003-0147/2007/16905-41584$15.00
DOI: 10.1086/513484

A Perfect Storm: The Combined Effects on Population Fluctuations of Autocorrelated Environmental Noise, Age Structure, and Density Dependence

Christopher C. Wilmers,1,*

Eric Post,2, and

Alan Hastings3,

1. Environmental Studies Department, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95064;

2. Department of Biology, Eberly College of Science, and Penn State Institutes of the Environment, Penn State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802;

3. Department of Environmental Science and Policy, University of California, Davis, California 95616

Abstract:

While it is widely appreciated that climate can affect the population dynamics of various species, a mechanistic understanding of how climate interacts with life‐history traits to influence population fluctuations requires development. Here we build a general density‐dependent age‐structured model that accounts for differential responses in life‐history traits to increasing population density. We show that as the temporal frequency of favorable environmental conditions increases, population fluctuations also increase provided that unfavorable environmental conditions still occur. As good years accumulate and the number of individuals in a population increases, successive life‐history traits become vulnerable to density dependence once a return to unfavorable conditions prevails. The stronger this ratcheting of density dependence in life‐history traits by autocorrelated climatic conditions, the larger the population fluctuations become. Highly fecund species, and those in which density dependence occurs in juvenile and adult vital rates at similar densities, are most sensitive to increases in the frequency of favorable conditions. Understanding the influence of global warming on temporal correlation in regional environmental conditions will be important in identifying those species liable to exhibit increased population fluctuations that could lead to their extinction.

Submitted January 23, 2006; Accepted November 22, 2006; Electronically published March 7, 2007

Keywords:

climate change, autocorrelation, population dynamics, North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), Isle Royale.

Associate Editor: William F. Morris

Editor: Donald L. DeAngelis

Cited by

J. E. HEWITT, S. F. THRUSH. (2009) Reconciling the influence of global climate phenomena on macrofaunal temporal dynamics at a variety of spatial scales. Global Change Biology 15:8, 1911-1929
Online publication date: 1-Sep-2009.
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David N. Koons, Samuel Pavard, Annette Baudisch, C. Jessica E. Metcalf. (2009) Is life-history buffering or lability adaptive in stochastic environments?. Oikos 118:7, 972-980
Online publication date: 1-Aug-2009.
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Guiming Wang, N. Thompson Hobbs, Saran Twombly, Randall B. Boone, Andrew W. Illius, Iain J. Gordon, John E. Gross. (2009) Density dependence in northern ungulates: interactions with predation and resources. Population Ecology 51:1, 123-132
Online publication date: 1-Feb-2009.
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Thomas Hovestadt, Piotr Nowicki. (2009) Process and measurement errors of population size: their mutual effects on precision and bias of estimates for demographic parameters. Biodiversity and Conservation 17:14, 3417-3429
Online publication date: 1-Jan-2009.
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Masami Fujiwara. (2008) Effects of an autocorrelated stochastic environment and fisheries on the age at maturity of Chinook salmon. Theoretical Ecology 1:2, 89-101
Online publication date: 1-Jul-2008.
CrossRef
CHRISTOPHER C. WILMERS, ERIC POST, ALAN HASTINGS. (2007) The anatomy of predator–prey dynamics in a changing climate. Journal of Animal Ecology 76:6, 1037-1044
Online publication date: 1-Dec-2007.
CrossRef
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