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Quantitative Genetic Studies of Behavioral Evolution

396

Citations

0

References

1995

Year

TLDR

The book synthesizes current theoretical and empirical studies to show how quantitative genetics illuminates diverse topics such as sexual selection, migration, sociality, and aggressive behaviour, with nearly half of the chapters addressing conceptual issues from quantitative genetic models to complementary optimality approaches. The book aims to examine the theory and methods of quantitative genetics and demonstrate their powerful applications to advanced students and scholars of behavioural evolution and genetics. The volume surveys research fields such as mating behaviour, sexual selection, migration, and size‑dependent behavioural variation, and presents case studies on territoriality in fruit flies, cannibalism in flour beetles, mate‑attractive traits in crickets, locomotor behaviour and physiology in the garter snake, and cold adaptation in the house mouse. Taken together, these studies document both the benefits and pitfalls of quantitative genetics.

Abstract

This text examines the theory and methods of quantitative genetics and presents case studies that illustrate the many ways in which the methods can be applied. The author brings together current theoretical and empirical studies to show how quantitative genetics can illuminate topics as diverse as sexual selection, migration, sociality and aggressive behaviour. Nearly half of the chapters focus on conceptual issues, ranging from quantitative genetic models to the complementary roles of quantitative genetic and optimality approaches in evolutionary studies. Other chapters illustrate how to use the techniques by providing surveys of research fields, such as the evolution of mating behaviour, sexual selection, migration and size-dependent behavioural variation. The balance of the volume offers case studies of territoriality in fruit flies, cannibalism in flour beetles, mate-attractive traits in crickets, locomotor behaviour and physiology in the garter snake, and cold adaptation in the house mouse. Taken together, these studies document both the benefits and pitfalls of quantitative genetics. This book aims to show the advanced student and scholar of behavioural evolution and genetics the many powerful uses of quantitative genetics in behavioural research.