C Sandrock… - Current Biology, 2011 - Elsevier The evolutionary maintenance of sex is one of the big unresolved puzzles in biology [1]. All else being equal, all-female asexual populations should enjoy a two-fold reproductive advantage over sexual relatives consisting of male and female individuals [1]. However, ... Cited by 3 - Related articles - All 2 versions
R Schaible, F Ringelhan, BH Kramer… - Experimental Gerontology, 2011 - Elsevier Variation in life history can reflect genetic differences, and may be caused by environmental effects on phenotypes. Understanding how these two sources of life history variation interact to express an optimal allocation of resources in a changing environment is central to life ...
S Aron, I Timmermans… - Biology Letters, 2011 - rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org An enduring problem in evolutionary biology is the near ubiquity of sexual reproduction despite the inherent cost of transmitting only half the parent's genes to progeny. Queens of some ant species circumvent this cost by using selectively both sexual reproduction and ... Related articles - All 3 versions
[HTML] from plos.orgAM Fiore-Donno, YK Novozhilov, M Meyer… - PloS one, 2011 - dx.plos.org Plasmodial slime molds (Myxogastria or Myxomycetes) are common and widespread unicellular organisms that are commonly assumed to have a sexual life cycle culminating with the formation of often macroscopic fruiting bodies that efficiently disseminate spores. However, ... Cached
[CITATION] Temperature effects on asexual reproduction rates of scyphozoan polyps from the NW Mediterranean Sea
JE Purcell, D Atienza, V Fuentes, A Olariaga… - Hydrobiologia (submitted), 2011 Cited by 3 - Related articles