R
Ryan L. Earley
Researcher at University of Alabama
Publications - 132
Citations - 4312
Ryan L. Earley is an academic researcher from University of Alabama. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mangrove rivulus & Population. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 127 publications receiving 3806 citations. Previous affiliations of Ryan L. Earley include Georgia State University & California State University, Fresno.
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Book ChapterDOI
Aggressive Behaviour in Fish: Integrating Information about Contest Costs
TL;DR: A more comprehensive understanding of behavioural variation will emerge only by integrating these different perspectives, which result from how each of these factors influences the benefits and costs of behaviour at a particular time and place.
Journal ArticleDOI
Relationships between external sexually dimorphic characteristics and internal gonadal morphology in a sex-changing fish
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the state of the ocellus and, to a greater extent, orange coloration are key predictors of internal gonadal state, however, the degree to which these characteristics are predictive of internalgonadal state was region-specific, with the o cellus and orange status of animals from Bahamas and Belize having a lower probability of forecasting internal Gonadal state than those from other regions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reproduction in Male Crotalus adamanteus Beauvois (Eastern Diamond-Backed Rattlesnake): Relationship of Plasma Testosterone to Testis and Kidney Dimensions and the Mating Season
TL;DR: A mating season of late summer/early fall for the present population of Eastern Diamond-backed Rattlesnakes is supported, particularly during the breeding period.
Journal ArticleDOI
Whole-genome sequencing reveals the extent of heterozygosity in a preferentially self-fertilizing hermaphroditic vertebrate.
Luana S. F. Lins,Shawn Trojahn,Alexandra Sockell,Muh-Ching Yee,Andrey Tatarenkov,Carlos Bustamante,Ryan L. Earley,Joanna L. Kelley +7 more
TL;DR: This study used whole-genome data to assess the levels of heterozygosity in different lineages of the mangrove rivulus and infer the phylogenetic relationships among those lineages, and sequenced whole genomes from 15 lineages that were completely homozygous at microsatellite loci.
Journal ArticleDOI
An evaluation of the taxonomic validity of Testudo werneri
TL;DR: The variation observed between populations is normal within a species and therefore T. werneri is not a distinct independent evolutionary lineage and should not be considered a separate species from T. kleinmanni.