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2001 (Click here for citation info via Researcher ID) In Press 117. Slatyer R, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2012. Polyandry occurs because females initially trade sex for protection. Animal Behaviour 116. Jennions MD, Kokko H, Klug H. 2012. The opportunity to be misled in studies of sexual selection. Journal of Evolutionary Biology [PDF of online version] 115. Kahn AT, Livingston JD, Jennions MD. 2012. Do females preferentially associate with males given a better start in life? Biology Letters [PDF of online version] 114. Callander S, Backwell PRY, Jennions MD. 2012. Context-dependent male mate choice: the effects of competitor presence and competitor size. Behavioural Ecology (in press) 113. Callander S, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2012. The effect of claw size and wave rate on female choice in a fiddler crab. Journal of Ethology (in press) 112.Booksmythe I, Hayes C, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. The effects of neighbor familiarity and size on cooperative defense of fiddler crab territories. Behavioural Ecology (in press) [PDF of online version] 111. Lehtonen J, Jennions MD, Kokko H. 2012 The many costs of sex. Trends in Ecology and Evolution (in press) [Link to online PDF] 110. Milner RNC, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2012. Keeping up appearances: male fiddler crabs wave faster in a crowd. Biology Letters (in press) [PDF of online version] 109. Slatyer R, Mautz B, Backwell PRY, Jennions MD. 2012. Estimating genetic benefits of polyandry from experimental studies: a meta-analysis. Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 87:1-33 [PDF] 108. Bolton J, Callender S, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2011. Even weak males help their neighbours: defence coalitions in a fiddler crab. Ethology 117:1027-1030 [PDF] 107. Callander S, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2011. Female choice over short and long distances: neighbour effects. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 65:2071-2078 [PDF] 106. Milner RNC, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2011. Know thine enemy's neighbour: neighbour size affects floater's choice of whom to fight. Behavioural Ecology 22:947-950 [PDF] 105. Mautz B, Jennions MD. 2011. The effect of competitor presence and relative competitive ability on male mate choice. Behavioural Ecology 22: 769-775 [PDF] 104. Milner RNC, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2011. Non-independent mate choice in a fiddler crab: a case of stimulus enhancement. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 65:1419-1424 [PDF] 103. Davidson A, Jennions MD, Nicotra AB. 2011. Do invasive species show higher phenotypic plasticity than native species, and is it adaptive? A meta-analysis. Ecology Letters 14:419-431 [PDF] 102. Kelly CD, Jennions MD. 2011. Sexual selection and sperm quantity: meta-analyses of strategic ejaculation. Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 86:863-884 [PDF] 101. Booksmythe I, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2011. Male fiddler crabs prefer conspecific females during simultaneous, but not sequential, mate choice. Animal Behaviour 81:775-778 [PDF] 100. Drayton JM, Jennions MD. 2011. Inbreeding and measures of immune function in the cricket Teleogryllus commodus. Behavioural Ecology 22:486-492 [PDF] 99. Mautz B, Detto T, Wong BBM, Kokko H, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2011. Male fiddler crabs defend multiple burrows to attract additional females. Behavioural Ecology 22: 261-267 [PDF] 98. Drayton JM, Milner R, Hall M, Jennions MD. 2011. The effect of inbreeding on courtship calling in the cricket Teleogryllus commodus. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 24:47-58 [PDF] 97. Reaney L, Drayton JM, Jennions MD. 2011. The role of body size and fighting experience in predicting contest behaviour in the black field cricket, Teleogryllus commodus. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 65: 217-225 [PDF] 96. Booksmythe I, Kokko H, Jennions MD. 2010. Sexual selection: the weevils of inbreeding. Current Biology 20: R672-R673 [PDF] 95. Booksmythe I, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2010. Interspecific assistance: fiddler crabs help heterospecific neighbours in territory defence. Biology Letters 6: 748-750 [PDF] 94. Milner RNC, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2010. Eavesdropping in crabs: an agency for ladies detection. Biology Letters 6: 755-757 [PDF] 93. Drayton JM, Milner RNC, Hunt J, Jennions MD. 2010. Inbreeding and advertisement calling in the cricket Teleogryllus commodus: laboratory and field experiments. Evolution 64: 3069-3083 [PDF] 92. Kokko H, Jennions MD. 2010. Ways to raise tadpoles. Nature 464: 990-991 [PDF] 91. Detto T, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2010. When and why do territorial coalitions occur? Experimental evidence in a fiddler crab. American Naturalist 175: E119-125 [PDF] 90. Milner RNC, Booksmythe I, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2010. The battle of the sexes? Territory acquisition and defence in male and female fiddler crabs. Animal Behaviour 79:735-738 [PDF] 89. Milner RNC, Detto T, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2010. Experimental evidence for a seasonal shift in the strength of a female mating preference. Behavioural Ecology 21:311-316 [PDF] 88. Klug H, Heuschel J, Jennions MD, Kokko H. 2010. The mismeasurement of sexual selection. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 23:447-462[PDF] 87. Booksmythe I, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2010. Investigating the 'dear enemy' phenomenon in the territory defence of the fiddler crab, Uca mjoebergi . Animal Behaviour 79:419-423 [PDF] 86. Milner RNC, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2010. Safe sex: male-female coalitions and pre-copulatory mate guarding in a fiddler crab. Biology Letters 6: 180-182 [PDF] 85. Booksmythe I, Milner RNC, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2010. How do weaponless male fiddler crabs avoid aggression? Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 64:485-491 [PDF] 84. Kahn A, Mautz B, Jennions MD. 2010. Females prefer to associate with males with longer intromittent organs in mosquitofish. Biology Letters 6: 55-58 [PDF] 82. Milner RNC, Detto T, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2010. Hunting and predation in a fiddler crab. Journal of Ethology 28: 171-173 [PDF]
2009 81. Kelly CD, Jennions MD. 2009. Sexually dimorphic immune response in the harem polygynous Wellington tree weta Hemideina crassidens. Physiological Entomology 34:174-179 [PDF] 80. Zajitschek F, Hunt J, Jennions MD, Hall M, Brooks RC. 2009. Effects of juvenile and adult diet on ageing and reproductive effort of male and female Black Field Crickets Teleogryllus commodus. Functional Ecology 23:602-611 [PDF] 79. Milner R, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2008. Does the environmental context of a signaling male influence his attractiveness? Animal Behaviour 76:1565-1570 [PDF] 78. Kokko H, Jennions MD. 2008. Parental investment, sexual selection and sex ratios. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 21:919-948 [PDF] 77. Fayed SA, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2008. What factors contribute to an ownership advantage? Biology Letters 4: 143-145 [PDF] 76. Kokko H, Jennions MD. 2008. Sexual conflict: the battle of the sexes reversed. Current Biology 18:R121-R123 [PDF] 75. Reaney LT, Sims RA, Sims SWM, Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 2008. Experiments with robots explain synchronized courtship in fiddler crabs. Current Biology 18:R62-R63 [PDF] 74. Bussière LF, Hunt J, Stölting KN, Jennions M, Brooks R. 2008. Mate choice for genetic quality when environments vary: suggestions for empirical progress. Genetica 134: 69-78 [PDF] 73. Hunt J, Blows MW, Zajitschek F, Jennions MD, Brooks R. 2007. Reconciling strong stabilizing selection with the maintenance of genetic variation in a natural population of black field crickets (Teleogryllus commodus). Genetics 177:875-880 [PDF] 72. Backwell PRY, Matsumasa M, Double M, Roberts A, Murai M, Keogh JS, Jennions MD. 2007. What are the consequences of being left clawed in a predominantly right clawed fiddler crab? Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 274: 2723-2729 [PDF] 71. Kokko H, Jennions MD, Houde AE. 2007. Evolution of frequency-dependent mate choice: keeping up with fashion trends. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 274: 1317-1324 [PDF] 70. Jennions MD, Drayton J, Brooks RC, Hunt J. 2007. Do female black field crickets Teleogryllus commodus benefit from polyandry? Journal of Evolutionary Biology 20: 1469-1477 [PDF] 69. Drayton J, Hunt J, Brooks R, Jennions MD. 2007. Sounds different: inbreeding depression in sexually selected traits in the field cricket Teleogryllus bimaculatus. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 20: 1138-1147 [PDF] 68. Zajitschek F, Hunt J, Zajitschek SR, Jennions MD, Brooks R. 2007. No Intra-Locus Sexual Conflict over Reproductive Fitness or Ageing in Field Crickets. PLoS ONE 2(1): e155 [PDF] 67. Fisher DO. Double MC, Blomberg SP, Jennions MD, Cockburn. 2006. Post-mating sexual selection increases lifetime fitness of polyandrous females in the wild. Nature 444: 89-92 [PDF] 66. Pandolfi JM, Tudhope A, Burr G, Chappell J, Edinger E, Frey M, Steneck R, Sharma C, Yeates A, Jennions MD, Lescinsky H, Newton A. 2006. Mass mortality following disturbance in Holocene coral reefs from Papua New Guinea. Geology 34: 949-952 [PDF] 65. Hunt , Jennions MD, Spyrou N, Brooks R. 2006. Artificial selection on male longevity influences age-dependent reproductive effort in the black field cricket, Teleogryllus commodus. American Naturalist 168: E72-E86 [PDF] 64. Kokko H, Jennions MD, Brooks R. 2006. Unifying and testing models of sexual selection. Annual Reviews of Ecology, Evolution and Systematics 37: 43-66 [PDF] 63. Jennions MD, Wong BMB, Cowling A., Donnelly C. 2006. Life history phenotypes in a live-bearing fish Brachyrhaphis episcopi living under different predator regimes: seasonal effects? Environmental Biology of Fish 76: 211-219 [PDF] 62. Bussière LF, Hunt J, Jennions MD, Brooks R. 2006. Sexual conflict and cryptic female choice in the black field cricket, Teleogryllus commodus. Evolution 60:792-800 [PDF] 61. Backwell PRY, Jennions MD, Wada K, Murai M, Christy J. 2006. Synchronous waving in two species of fiddler crabs. Acta Ethologica 9:22-25 [PDF] 60. Kelly CD, Jennions MD. 2006. The h-index and career assessment by numbers. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 21:167-170 [PDF] 59. Bentsen, CL, Hunt J , Jennions MD, Brooks R. 2006. Complex multivariate sexual selection on male acoustic signalling in a wild population of Teleogryllus commodus. American Naturalist 167: E102-E116 [PDF] 58. Hunt J , Brooks R, Jennions MD. 2005. Female mate choice as a condition-dependent life history trait. American Naturalist 166: 79-92 [PDF] 57. Brooks R, Hunt J, Blows MW, Smith MJ, Bussière LF, Jennions MD. 2005. Experimental evidence for multivariate stabilizing sexual selection. Evolution 59: 871-880 [PDF] 56. Shackleton M, Jennions MD, Hunt J. 2005. Fighting success and attractiveness as predictors of male mating success in the black field cricket Teleogryllus commodus: the effectiveness of no-choice tests. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 58:1-8 [PDF] 55. Torres-Vila LM, Jennions MD. 2005. Male mating history and female fecundity in the Lepidoptera: do male virgins make better partners? Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 57: 318-326 [PDF] 54. Head ML, Hunt, J, Jennions MD, Brooks RC. 2005. The indirect benefits of mating with attractive males outweigh the direct costs. Public Library of Science, Biology 3: 289-294 [PDF] 53. Savage KE, Hunt J, Jennions MD, Brooks RC. 2005. Male attractiveness covaries with fighting ability but not prior fight outcome in house crickets. Behavioural Ecology 16:196-200 [PDF] 52. Hunt J, Brooks R, Jennions MD, Smith MJ, Bentsen CL, Bussière LF. 2004. High- quality male field crickets invest heavily in sexual display but die young. Nature 432: 1024-1027 [PDF] 51. Jennions MD, Hunt J, Graham R, Brooks RC. 2004. No evidence for inbreeding avoidance through post-copulatory mechanisms in the black field cricket Teleogryllus commodus. Evolution 58:2472-2477 [PDF] 50. Backwell PRY, Jennions MD. 2004. Coalition among male fiddler crabs. Nature 430: 417 [PDF] 49. Hunt J, Bussiere L, Jennions MD, Brooks RC 2004. What is genetic quality? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 19: 329-333 [PDF] 48. Wong BMB, Jennions MD, Keogh JS, 2004. Sequential male mate choice in a fish, the Pacific blue-eye Pseudomugil signifer. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 56:253-256 [PDF] 47. Torres-Vila LM, Rodríguez-Molina MC, Jennions MD. 2004. Polyandry and fecundity in the Lepidoptera: can methodological and conceptual approaches bias outcomes? Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 55: 315-324 [PDF] 46. Wong BMB, Keogh JS, Jennions MD. 2004. Mate recognition in a freshwater fish: geographic distance, genetic differentiation, and variation in female preference for local over foreign males. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 17:701-708 [PDF] 45. Jennions MD, Møller AP, Hunt, J. 2004. Meta-analysis can "fail": reply to Kotiaho & Tomkins. Oikos 104: 191-193 [PDF] 44. Brooks R, Bussiere L, Jennions MD, Hunt J. 2004. Sinister strategies succeed at the Cricket World Cup. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B (Supplement) 271: S64-66 [PDF] 43. Wong BMB, Jennions MD. 2003. Swimming costs influence male mate choice in a freshwater fish. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B (Supplement) 270: S36-S38 [PDF] 42. Kokko H, Jennions MD. 2003. It takes two to tango. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 18: 103-104 [PDF] 41. Jennions MD, Backwell PRY, Murai M, Christy JH. 2003. How long should prey hide in response to a potential predator? Hiding behaviour in fiddler crabs. Animal Behaviour 66: 251-257 [PDF] 40. Kokko H, Brooks R, Jennions MD, Morely J. 2003. The evolution of mate choice and mating biases. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 270: 653-664 [PDF] 39. Jennions MD, Møller AP. 2003. A survey of the statistical power of research in behavioral ecology and animal behaviour. Behavioural Ecology 14: 438-455 [PDF] 38. Møller AP, Jennions MD. 2002. How much variation can be explained by ecologists and evolutionary biologists? Oecologia 132: 492-500 [PDF] 37. Jennions MD, Telford SR. 2002. Life-history phenotypes in populations of Brachyrhaphis episcopi (Poeciliidae) with different predator communities. Oecologia 132: 44-50 [PDF] 36. Jennions MD, Møller AP. 2002. Publication bias in ecology and evolution: an empirical assessment using the “trim and fill” method. Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 77: 211-222 [PDF] 35. Jennions MD, Kelly CD. 2002. Geographic variation in male genitalia in Brachyrhaphis episcopi (Poecillidae): is it sexually or naturally selected? Oikos 97: 79-86 [PDF] 34. Vélez M, Jennions MD, Telford SR. 2002. The effect of an experimental brood reduction on male desertion in the Panamanian Blue Acara Cichlid, Aequidens coeruleopunctatus. Ethology 108: 331-340 [PDF] 33. Jennions MD, Møller AP. 2002. Relationships fade with time: a meta-analysis of temporal trends in publication in ecology and evolution. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 269: 43-48 [PDF] 32. Møller AP, Jennions MD. 2001. How important are direct fitness benefits of sexual selection? Naturwissenschaften 88: 401-415 [PDF] 31. Jennions MD, Møller AP, Petrie M. 2001. Sexually-selected traits and adult survival: a meta-analysis. Quarterly Review of Biology 76: 3-36 [PDF] 30. Møller AP, Jennions MD. 2001. Testing and adjusting for publication bias. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 16: 580-586 [PDF] 29. Jennions MD, Brooks R. 2001. A sense of history. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 16: 113-115 [PDF] 28. Jennions MD & Polakow D. 2001. The effect of partial brood loss on male desertion in a cichlid fish: an experimental test. Behavioural Ecology 12: 84-92 [PDF] 27. Oliveira RF & 22 others . 2000. Considerations on the use of video playbacks as visual stimuli: the Lisbon workshop consensus. Acta Ethologica 3: 61-65 [PDF] 26. Jennions MD, Petrie M. 2000. Why do females mate multiply? A review of the genetic benefits. Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 75: 21-64 (Reproduced with the permission of Cambridge University Press) [PDF] 25. Backwell PRY, Christy JH, Telford SR, Jennions MD, Passmore NI. 2000. Dishonest signaling in a fiddler crab. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 267: 719-724 [PDF] 24. Brooks R, Jennions MD. 1999. The dark side of sexual selection. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 14: 336-337 [PDF] 23. Backwell PRY, Jennions MD, Passmore NI, Christy JH. 1999. Female choice in the synchronously waving fiddler crab, Uca annulipes. Ethology 105: 415-422 [PDF] 22. Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 1998. Variation in courtship rate in the fiddler crab Uca annulipes: is it related to male attractiveness? Behavioural Ecology 9: 605-611 [PDF] 21. Jennions MD. 1998. Tibial coloration, fluctuating asymmetry and female choice behaviour in the damselfly Platycypha caligata. Animal Behaviour 55: 1517-1528 [PDF] 20. Jennions MD. 1998. The effect of leg band symmetry on female-male association in zebra finches. Animal Behaviour 55: 61-67 [PDF] 19. Telford SR, Jennions MD. 1998. Establishing cryptic female choice in animals. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 13: 216-218 [PDF] 18. Koga T, Backwell PRY, Jennions MD, Christy JH. 1998. Elevated predation risk changes mating behaviour and courtship in a fiddler crab Uca beebei. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 265: 1385-1390 [PDF] 17. Backwell PRY, Jennions MD. Passmore NI, Christy JH. 1998. Synchronized courtship in fiddler crabs. Nature 391: 31-32 [PDF] 16. Jennions MD. 1997. Female promiscuity and genetic incompatability. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 12: 251-253 [PDF] 15. Jennions MD. 1997. Stability in coral communities: a natural experiment. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 12: 3-4 [PDF] 14. Jennions MD & Petrie, M. 1997. Variation in mate choice and mating preferences: a review of causes and consequences. Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 72: 283-327 [PDF] 13. Jennions MD. 1996. The allometry of fluctuating asymmetry in southern African plants: flowers and leaves. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 59: 127-142 [PDF] 12. Jennions MD & Backwell PRY. 1996. Residency and size affect fight duration and outcome in the fiddler crab, Uca annulipes. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 57: 293-306 [PDF] 11. Jennions MD, Bishop PJ, Backwell PRY, Passmore, NI. 1995. Call rate variability and female choice in the African frog, Hyperolius marmoratus. Behaviour 132: 709-720 [PDF] 10. Jennions MD, Backwell PRY, Passmore NI. 1995. Repeatability of mate choice: the effect of size in the African painted reed frog, Hyperolius marmoratus. Animal Behaviour 49: 181-186 [PDF] 9. Backwell PRY, Jennions MD, Christy J & Schobe U. 1995. Pillar-building in the fiddler crab Uca beebei: evidence for a condition-dependent ornament. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 36: 185-192 [PDF] 8. Bishop PJ, Jennions MD, Passmore NI. 1995. Chorus size and call intensity: female choice in the painted reed frog, Hyperolius marmoratus. Behaviour 132: 721-731 [PDF] 7. Polakow D, Backwell PRY, Caithness N, Jennions MD. 1995. Stabilising or directional selection in signalling systems: investigations in a population of painted reed frogs, Hyperolius marmoratus. South African Journal of Science 91: 270-271 [PDF] 6. Jennions MD, Macdonald DW. 1994. Cooperative breeding in mammals. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 9: 89-93 [PDF] 5. Jennions MD. 1993. Female choice in birds and the cost of long tails. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 8: 230-232 [PDF] 4. Jennions MD, Passmore NI. 1993. Sperm competition in frogs: testis size and a ‘sterile male’ experiment on Chiromantis xerampelina (Rhacophoridae). Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 50: 211-220 [PDF] 3. Backwell PRY, Jennions MD. 1993. Mate choice in the Neotropical frog, Hyla ebraccata: sexual selection, mate recognition and signal selection. Animal Behaviour 45: 1248-1250 [PDF] 2. Jennions MD, Backwell PRY, Passmore NI. 1992. Breeding behaviour of the African frog, Chiromantis xerampelina: multiple spawning and polyandry. Animal Behaviour 44: 1091-1100 [PDF] 1. Jennions MD, Backwell PRY. 1992. Chorus size influences on the anti-predator behaviour of a Neotropical frog. Animal Behaviour 44: 990-992 [PDF] 1. Jennions MD, Kokko H. 2010. Sexual selection. In DF Westneat & CW Fox (Eds) Evolutionary Behavioural Ecology, pp343-364, Oxford University Press, Oxford. 2. Kokko H, Jennions MD. 2010. Behavioral ecology: the natural history of evolutionary theory. In: Bell MA, Eanes WF, Futuyma DJ, Levinton JS (Eds) Evolution After Darwin: the First 150 Years. Sinaeur Publishing. 3. Kokko H, Jennions MD. In press. Sex differences in parental care. In N Royle, PT Smiseth, M Kolliker (Eds). The Evolution of Parental Care. Oxford University Press, Oxford. 4. Jennions MD, Kokko H. In press. Sexual selection: Mate choice. In J Losos, D Baum, D Futuyma, H Hoekstra, R Lenski, A Moore, D Schluter, M Whitlock (Eds) The Princeton Guide to Evolution. Princeton University Press, Princeton. The following are chapters in a forthcoming book scheduled for 2011/12. The book is:
Handbook of Meta-analysis in Ecology and Evolution. 5. Cote I, Jennions MD. 2012. Overview: procedure of meta-analysis in a nutshell In: 6. Jennions MD, Lortie C, Koricheva J. 2012. Meta-analysis and its effect on scientific practices. 7. Jennions MD, Lortie C, Rosenberg M, Rothstein H. 2012. Publication and related biases. 8. Lajeunesse M, Jennions MD, Rosenberg M. 2012. Correcting for phylogeny. 9. Jennions MD, Lortie C, Koricheva J. 2012. Meta-analysis for evaluation of controversies and theory. 10. Koricheva J, Jennions MD, Lau J. 2012. Temporal changes in effect sizes: detection and causes, cumulative meta-analysis. 11. Mengersen K, Jennions MD, Schmid C. 2012. Non-independence: methods for combining effect sizes within studies. Book Reviews, Letters and so on Booksmythe I, Kokko H, Jennions MD. 2010. Sexual selection: the weevils of inbreeding. Current Biology (in press) Kokko H, Jennions MD. 2010. Ways to raise tadpoles. Nature 465: 390-391 [PDF] Kelly CD, Jennions MD. 2007. H-index: influence of age and sex makes it unreliable. Nature 497:403
Jennions MD. 2006. Sexual
tension: Does conflict lead to costly mate choice? (Review of Sexual
Conflict by G Arnqvist & L. Rowe) Pizarri and colleagues. 2006. Debating sexual selection and mating strategies. Science 312: 690 Jennions MD. 2004. Female multiple mating. In Encyclopedia of Animal Behavior (ed. M. Bekoff). Greenwood Publishing Jennions MD. 2004. Mate choice. In Encyclopedia of Animal Behavior (ed. M. Bekoff). Greenwood Publishing Jennions MD. 2004. Mate desertion. In Encyclopedia of Animal Behavior (ed. M. Bekoff). Greenwood Publishing Jennions MD. 2004. Sexual selection. In Encyclopedia of Animal Behavior (ed. M. Bekoff). Greenwood Publishing Kokko H, Jennions MD. 2003. Response to McDowall: in defence of the caring male. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 18: 611-612
Jennions MD. 2002. How
male insects score (Review of Sperm Competition in Insects by LW Simmons)
Jennions MD. 1997. Stability and invasability of coral communities: reply: Letter. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 12: 195
Jennions MD. 1995. Too sexy for South Africa? (Review of Sexual Selection and
the Barn Swallow by
AP
Møller, 1994).
Jennions MD & Oakes EJ. 1994. Symmetry and sexual selection: Letter.
Trends
in Ecology and Evolution 9: 440 |
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