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Tadeusz J. Kawecki

Researcher at University of Lausanne

Publications -  92
Citations -  9348

Tadeusz J. Kawecki is an academic researcher from University of Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Sexual selection. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 89 publications receiving 8559 citations. Previous affiliations of Tadeusz J. Kawecki include University of Maryland, College Park & University of Fribourg.

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Conceptual issues in local adaptation

TL;DR: This paper advocates multifaceted approaches to the study of local adaptation, and stresses the need for experiments explicitly addressing hypotheses about the role of particular ecological and genetic factors that promote or hinder local adaptation.
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Adaptation to Marginal Habitats

TL;DR: The ability to adapt to marginal habitats, in which survival and reproduction are initially poor, plays a crucial role in the evolution of ecological niches and species ranges as mentioned in this paper, but adaptation to marginal habitat may be limited by genetic, developmental, and functional constraints, but also by consequences of demographic characteristics of marginal populations, which makes them demographically and genetically dependent on core habitats and prone to gene flow counteracting local selection.
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A fitness cost of learning ability in Drosophila melanogaster

TL;DR: It is shown that the evolution of an improved learning ability in replicated experimental fly populations has been consistently associated with a decline of larval competitive ability, compared with replicated control populations, providing evidence for a constitutive fitness cost of learning ability.
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A cost of long-term memory in Drosophila.

TL;DR: It is shown that flies induced to form long-term memory become more susceptible to extreme stress (such as desiccation), in contrast, induction of anesthesia-resistant memory had no detectable effect on Desiccation resistance.
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Fitness sensitivity and the canalization of life-history traits.

TL;DR: The results reported here cannot be explained by the classical hypothesis of reduction in the number of loci segregating for traits with greater impact on fitness and confirm that traits with more impact on Fitness are more strongly canalized.