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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Integrating Concepts And Technologies To Advance The Study Of Bird Migration, W. Douglas Robinson, Melissa Bowlin, Isabelle Bisson, Judy Shamoun-Barnes, Kasper Thorup, Robert H. Diehl, Thomas H. Kunz, Sarah Mabey, David W. Winkler Sep 2010

Integrating Concepts And Technologies To Advance The Study Of Bird Migration, W. Douglas Robinson, Melissa Bowlin, Isabelle Bisson, Judy Shamoun-Barnes, Kasper Thorup, Robert H. Diehl, Thomas H. Kunz, Sarah Mabey, David W. Winkler

Faculty Publications

Recent technological innovation has opened new avenues in migration research - for instance, by allowing individual migratory animals to be followed over great distances and long periods of time, as well as by recording physiological information. Here, we focus on how technology - specifically applied to bird migration - has advanced our knowledge of migratory connectivity, and the behavior, demography, ecology, and physiology of migrants. Anticipating the invention of new and smaller tracking devices, in addition to the ways that technologies may be combined to measure and record the behavior of migratory animals, we also summarize major conceptual questions that …


Information Acquisition And Sociality Among Migratory Birds, Zoltán Németh Aug 2010

Information Acquisition And Sociality Among Migratory Birds, Zoltán Németh

Dissertations

Information use is a key feature of adaptive behavior: the better informed an individual, the better it is able to adjust its behavior to meet the demands of a variable world. Therefore, most animals attempt to reduce environmental uncertainty by gathering information when it is available. However, tracking unpredictable ecological factors may carry costs as individuals invest valuable time and energy in the process of information acquisition. Social learning (i.e., use of social information inadvertently produced by other individuals) enables the individual to gain rapid and more complete assessment of its novel environment. This process may be particularly important for …


Natural Selection On Testosterone Production In A Wild Songbird Population, Joel W. Mcglothlin, Danielle J. Whittaker, Sara E. Schrock, Nicole M. Gerlach, Jodie M. Jawor, Eric A. Snajdr, Ellen D. Ketterson Jun 2010

Natural Selection On Testosterone Production In A Wild Songbird Population, Joel W. Mcglothlin, Danielle J. Whittaker, Sara E. Schrock, Nicole M. Gerlach, Jodie M. Jawor, Eric A. Snajdr, Ellen D. Ketterson

Faculty Publications

Because of their role in mediating life-history trade-offs, hormones are expected to be strongly associated with components of fitness; however, few studies have examined how natural selection acts on hormonal variation in the wild. In a songbird, the dark-eyed junco (Junco hyemalis), field experiments have shown that exogenous testosterone alters individuals' resolution of the survival-reproduction trade-off, enhancing reproduction at the expense of survival. Here we used standardized injections of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) to assay variation in the testosterone production of males. Using measurements of annual survival and reproduction, we found evidence of strong natural selection acting on GnRH-induced …