The most recent findings, research and studies conducted on the behavior of tropical animals
1 - Sexual Conflict and Sexual Selection in the Goodeinae, a Clade
of Viviparous Fish with Effective Female Mate Choice
Constantino Macías Garcia and Alejandra Valero
2 - A Spatial Dance to the Music of Time in the Leks of Long-tailed
Manakins
David B. McDonald
3 - Host Use by Generalist and Specialist Brood Parasitic Cowbirds
at Population and Individual Levels
María C. de Mársico, Bettina Mahler, Manuela Chomnalez, Alejandro
G. Di Giácomo and Juan C. Reboreda
4 - Dealing with Uncertainty: Flexible Reproductive Strategies in a
Tropical Passerine Bird in an Unstable Ecological and Social
Environment
Michael S. Webster, Jordan Karubian and Hubert Schwabl
5 – Color in a Long-lived Tropical Seabird: Sexual Selection in a
Life History Context
Roxana Torres and Alberto Velando
6 - Intra-specific Variation in the Behavioral Ecology of a
Tropical Carnivore, the Spotted Hyena
Kay E. Holekamp and Stephanie M. Dloniak
7 – Ecology, Social Behavior and Conservation in Zebras
Daniel I. Rubenstein
8 - Social Organization in Callithrix jacchus: Cooperation and
Competition
Maria Emília Yamamoto, Arrilton Araújo, Maria Bernardete C. de
Sousa and Maria de Fátima Arruda
9 - Ecological Determinants of Social Systems: Perspectives on the
Functional Role of Roosting Ecology in the Social Behavior of
Tent-roosting Bats
Gloriana Chaverri and Thomas H. Kunz
Dr. H. Jane Brockmann is professor of zoology at the University of Florida, Gainesville. Her research interests include ethology, behavioral ecology; the evolution and economics of behavior; nesting and mating behavior of horseshoe crabs and solitary wasps; and alternative strategies, conflict evolution of social behavior and sex ratios. Charles T. Snowdon is a Hilldale Professor of Psychology and Zoology at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Currently editor of the Journal of Comparative Psychology, he was previously North American Editor of Animal Behaviour and has served as President of the Animal Behavior Society. He has held a Research Scientist Award from the National Institute of Mental Health since 1977. His research interests are in vocal and chemical communication, reproductive behavioral biology, parental care and infant development in cooperatively breeding primates. His students and collaborators work in both captive and field settings. Professor Tim Roper has a Personal Chair in Animal Behaviour at the University of Sussex. He has been Secretary of the Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour, a Council Member of the International Society for Behavioural Ecology and both European Editor and Executive Editor of Animal Behaviour. His research interest is in the behavioral ecology of social mammals, especially badgers.
"The series is designed for psychologists, zoologists, and psychiatrists, but will also be a valuable reference for workers in endocrinology, neurology, physiology, ethnology, and ecology."--BIOLOGICAL ABSTRACTS
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