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Jean Clobert

Researcher at Centre national de la recherche scientifique

Publications -  250
Citations -  33710

Jean Clobert is an academic researcher from Centre national de la recherche scientifique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Biological dispersal. The author has an hindex of 83, co-authored 244 publications receiving 30602 citations. Previous affiliations of Jean Clobert include Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University & Paul Sabatier University.

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Evolution of Sex-Biased Dispersal.

TL;DR: These findings marginally corroborated Greenwood's hypothesis by showing relationships between the direction of sex-biased dispersal, mating systems, and territoriality, and highlighted that the evolution of this bias was more linked to parental care and sexual dimorphism.
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Self-recognition, color signals, and cycles of greenbeard mutualism and altruism.

TL;DR: It is shown that payoffs of cooperation depend on asymmetric costs of orange neighbors, and recognition and cooperation arise from genome-wide factors based on the mapping study of the location of genes responsible for self-recognition behavior, recognition of blue color, and the color locus.
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Morphs, dispersal behavior, genetic similarity, and the evolution of cooperation.

TL;DR: In this study, male color morphs of side-blotched lizards settle nonrandomly with respect to genetic similarity, showing that genome-wide correlational selection links many traits to the morph locus, including settlement behavior.
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Survival rate in the great tit parus major in relation to sex, age, and immigration status

TL;DR: Differences in survival between the four groups are not consistent in direction, although sometimes strongly significant, and may be related to sex differences in dispersal behaviour.
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Social personality trait and fitness

TL;DR: This work investigated the relationship between sociability and survival, body growth and fecundity, in one-year-old individuals in semi-natural populations with varying density, and discussed the position of sociability in a more general individual behavioural pattern including boldness, exploration and aggressiveness.