January 31 Elise Lauterbur
February 02 Marcy Ekanayake-Weber February 14 Jacob Feder February 21 Alicia Lamb February 28 Eliot Monaco March 07 Lauren Petrullo March 14 Spring Break March 22 Guest speaker Brian Hare March 28 Katherine Kling April 04 Rachel Perlman April 11 AAPA practice posters April 18 AAPA practice podium April 28 Guest speaker Ben Dantzer May 02 Carola Borries
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Carola Borries leads the discussion on Tung J, Archie EA, Altmann J, Alberts SC. 2016. Cumulative early life adversity predicts longevity in wild baboons. Nat Commun 7:11181.
Ben Dantzer, Departments of Psychology & Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan talks about “Eco-evo-endocrinology: An integrative approach to understanding mechanisms of behavioral and life history plasticity”
Rachel Perlman leads the discussion on Corral-Lopez A, Bloch NI, Kotrschal A, van der Bijl W, Buechel SD, Mank JE, Kolm N. 2017 - early view. Female brain size affects the assessment of male attractiveness during mate choice. Sci Adv.
Katherine Kling leads the discussion on: Liebl AL, Martin LB. 2014. Living on the edge: range edge birds consume novel foods sooner than established ones. Behav Ecol 25:1089-1096.
Brian Hare, Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University talks about:
"Survival of the Friendliest: are dogs, bonobos and humans self-domesticated?" Lauren Petrullo leads the discussion on: Vetter SG, Brandstaetter C, Macheiner M, Suchentrunk F, Gerritsmann H, Bieber C. 2016. Shy is sometimes better: personality and juvenile body mass affect adult reproductive success in wild boars, Sus scrofa. Anim Behav 115:193-205.
Eliot Monaco leads the discussion on: de Silva S, Schmid V, Wittemyer G. 2017. Fission–fusion processes weaken dominance networks of female Asian elephants in a productive habitat. Behav Ecol 28:243-252.
Alicia Lamb leads the discussion on: "Tsutsui ND, Suarez AV, Holway DA, Case TJ. 2000. Reduced genetic variation and the success of an invasive species. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 97:5948-5953.
Jacob Feder leads the discussion on: Josephs N, Bonnell TR, Dostie M, Barrett L, Henzi SP. 2016. Working the crowd: sociable vervets benefit by reducing exposure to risk. Behav Ecol 27:988-994.
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