scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of learning on sexual selection and speciation.

TLDR
It is pointed out that the context of learning, namely how and when learning takes place, often makes a crucial difference to the predicted evolutionary outcome.
Abstract
Learning is widespread in nature, occurring in most animal taxa and in several different ecological contexts and, thus, might play a key role in evolutionary processes. Here, we review the accumulating empirical evidence for the involvement of learning in mate choice and the consequences for sexual selection and reproductive isolation. We distinguish two broad categories: learned mate preferences and learned traits under mate selection (such as bird song). We point out that the context of learning, namely how and when learning takes place, often makes a crucial difference to the predicted evolutionary outcome. Factors causing biases in learning and when one should expect the evolution of learning itself are also explored.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Application of Ecological Theory Toward an Understanding of the Human Microbiome

TL;DR: This work explores three core scenarios of human microbiome assembly: development in infants, representing assembly in previously unoccupied habitats; recovery from antibiotics, representingassembly after disturbance; and invasion by pathogens, representingAssembly in the context of invasive species.
Book

Pheromones and Animal Behavior: Chemical Signals and Signatures

TL;DR: This extensively revised and expanded book offers a thorough exploration of the evolutionary and behavioral contexts of chemical communication along with a detailed introduction to the molecular and neural basis of signal perception through olfaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolutionary divergence in acoustic signals: causes and consequences

TL;DR: A conceptual framework for testing the relative significance of both adaptive and neutral mechanisms leading to acoustic divergence is summarized, predictions for cases where these processes lead to speciation are predicted, and how their relative importance plays out over evolutionary time are summarized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tinbergen's four questions: an appreciation and an update

TL;DR: This year is the 50th anniversary of Tinbergen's article 'On aims and methods of ethology', where he first outlined the four 'major problems of biology', and it would seem a suitable opportunity to reflect on the four questions and evaluate the scientific work that they encourage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cultural evolutionary theory: How culture evolves and why it matters

TL;DR: The core concepts in cultural evolutionary theory as they pertain to the extension of biology through culture are reviewed, focusing on cultural evolutionary applications in population genetics, ecology, and demography.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Models of speciation by sexual selection on polygenic traits

TL;DR: The models elucidate genetic mechanisms that can initiate or contribute to rapid speciation by sexual isolation and divergence of secondary sexual characters in polygamous species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genotype-environment interaction and the evolution of phenotypic plasticity.

TL;DR: These models utilize the statistical relationship which exists between genotype‐environment interaction and genetic correlation to describe evolution of the mean phenotype under soft and hard selection in coarse‐grained environments.
Book

Cognition, evolution, and behavior

TL;DR: This chapter discusses Cognition, Evolution and the Study of Behavior, the Behavioral Ecology of Social Learning, and Cognitive Ethology and the Evolution of Mind, which aims to provide a framework for thinking about learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Skepticism towards santa rosalia, or why are there so few kinds of animals?

TL;DR: In a classic paper, Hutchinson (1959) set the tone for much of the ecological work done during the past 20 years by suggesting that ecologists try to explain the numbers of species of animals by explaining how the species could coexist.
Journal ArticleDOI

Convergence, adaptation, and constraint

TL;DR: Despite criticism from some systematically minded biologists, it is reaffirm that convergence in taxa occupying similar selective environments often is the result of natural selection, but convergent evolution of a trait in a particular environment can occur for reasons other than selection on that trait in that environment.
Related Papers (5)