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Lisa M. Angeloni

Researcher at Colorado State University

Publications -  64
Citations -  2592

Lisa M. Angeloni is an academic researcher from Colorado State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Predation. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 61 publications receiving 2042 citations. Previous affiliations of Lisa M. Angeloni include University of California, San Diego.

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Playing God with guppies – informing tough conservation decisions using a model experimental system

TL;DR: This study finds that divergent immigrants had a positive effect on population fitness compared to no immigrants at all and adds to the mounting evidence that demographic and genetic rescue are plausible management strategies in certain cases and provides some empirical insight into the outcome of non-ideal translocation scenarios.
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Rapid evolution and plasticity of genitalia

TL;DR: The importance of both evolution and developmental plasticity in explaining genital variation is demonstrated, with Trinidadian guppies demonstrating rapid genital evolution in 2–3 years, as well as the evolution of plasticity.
Posted ContentDOI

Is energetics or competition a stronger driver of male smallmouth bass seasonal reproductive timing

TL;DR: Results suggest that timing of reproduction in this population of smallmouth bass is more strongly influenced by energetic constraints than size-based competition amongst males, and that growth of individual males between seasons better predicted changes in timing of reproduce than changes in size relative to competitors.

Patterns of Human-Coyote Conflicts in the

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used reports from 22 entities within the Denver Metropolitan Area (DMA) in Colorado that provided information on coyote observations (signs, sightings, and encounters) and conflicts (incidents, pet-attacks, and human- attacks).
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Size‐associated energetic constraints on the seasonal onset of reproduction in a species with indeterminate growth

TL;DR: In this article , the authors harnessed decade-long behavioral data on parental male smallmouth bass, Micropterus dolomieu, to investigate contributions of energetic allometry to differences in reproductive timing.