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Original Articles

Frequency of female morphs is related to an index of male density in the damselfly, Nehalennia irene (Hagen)

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Pages 28-33 | Received 16 Feb 1994, Accepted 24 Nov 1994, Published online: 24 Mar 2016

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Read on this site (3)

Hans Van Gossum, Kirsten Beirinckx, Mark R. Forbes & Thomas N. Sherratt. (2007) Reproductive interference between Nehalennia damselfly species. Écoscience 14:1, pages 1-7.
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OlaM. Fincke, Reinhard Jödicke, DennisR. Paulson & ThomasD. Schultz. (2005) The evolution and frequency of female color morphs in Holarctic Odonata: why are male-like females typically the minority?. International Journal of Odonatology 8:2, pages 183-212.
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StanislavN. Gorb. (1999) VISUAL CUES IN MATE RECOGNITION IN THE DAMSELFLY ISCHNURA ELEGANS VANDER LINDEN (ZYGOPTERA: COENAGRIONIDAE). International Journal of Odonatology 2:1, pages 83-93.
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Articles from other publishers (28)

Mingzi Xu & Ola M. Fincke. (2022) To harass or to respect: the economy of male persistence despite female refusal in a damselfly with scramble mate competition. International Journal of Odonatology 25, pages 7-15.
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Silvana Piersanti, Gianandrea Salerno, Viviana Di Pietro, Leonardo Giontella, Manuela Rebora, Albyn Jones & Ola M. Fincke. (2021) Tests of search image and learning in the wild: Insights from sexual conflict in damselflies. Ecology and Evolution 11:9, pages 4399-4412.
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Jessica Bots, Arne Iserbyt, Hans Van Gossum, Martijn Hammers & Thomas N. Sherratt. (2015) Frequency-Dependent Selection on Female Morphs Driven by Premating Interactions with Males. The American Naturalist 186:1, pages 141-150.
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MICHAEL GRANTANDREW ROBISONOLA M. FINCKE. (2014) Use of stable isotopes to assess the intraspecific foraging niche of males and female colour morphs of the damselfly Enallagma hageni . Ecological Entomology 39:1, pages 109-117.
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H. Ajuria Ibarra & T. Reader. (2013) Reasons to be different: do conspicuous polymorphisms in invertebrates persist because rare forms are fitter?. Journal of Zoology 290:2, pages 81-95.
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Arne Iserbyt, Hans Van Gossum & Robby Stoks. (2012) Biogeographical Survey Identifies Consistent Alternative Physiological Optima and a Minor Role for Environmental Drivers in Maintaining a Polymorphism. PLoS ONE 7:2, pages e32648.
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Mark R. Forbes, Julia J. Mlynarek, Jane Allison & Kerry R. Hecker. (2011) Seasonality of gregarine parasitism in the damselfly, Nehalennia irene: understanding unimodal patterns. Parasitology Research 110:1, pages 245-250.
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Arne Iserbyt, Jessica Bots, Stefan Van Dongen, Janice J. Ting, Hans Van Gossum & Thomas N. Sherratt. (2011) Frequency-dependent variation in mimetic fidelity in an intraspecific mimicry system. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 278:1721, pages 3116-3122.
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ARNE ISERBYT & HANS VAN GOSSUM. (2011) Show your true colour: cues for male mate preference in an intra-specific mimicry system. Ecological Entomology 36:5, pages 544-548.
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Yuma Takahashi, Jin Yoshimura, Satoru Morita & Mamoru Watanabe. (2010) NEGATIVE FREQUENCY-DEPENDENT SELECTION IN FEMALE COLOR POLYMORPHISM OF A DAMSELFLY. Evolution 64:12, pages 3620-3628.
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A. Iserbyt, J. Bots, H. Van Gossum & K. Jordaens. (2010) Did historical events shape current geographic variation in morph frequencies of a polymorphic damselfly?. Journal of Zoology 282:4, pages 256-265.
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Yuma Takahashi & Mamoru Watanabe. (2010) Morph-Specific Fecundity and Egg Size in the Female-Dimorphic Damselfly Ischnura senegalensis . Zoological Science 27:4, pages 325-329.
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Arne Iserbyt & Hans Van Gossum. (2009) Unexpected absence of behavioural differences between female damselfly colour morphs. Animal Behaviour 78:6, pages 1463-1469.
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Janice J. Ting, Jessica Bots, Felipe Pérez Jvostov, Hans van Gossum & Thomas N. Sherratt. (2009) Effects of extreme variation in female morph frequencies on the mating behaviour of male damselflies. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 64:2, pages 225-236.
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H. Van GossumT. RobbM. R. ForbesL. Rasmussen. (2008) Female-limited polymorphism in a widespread damselfly: morph frequencies, male density, and phenotypic similarity of andromorphs to males. Canadian Journal of Zoology 86:10, pages 1131-1138.
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Martijn Hammers & Hans Van Gossum. (2008) Variation in female morph frequencies and mating frequencies: random, frequency-dependent harassment or male mimicry?. Animal Behaviour 76:4, pages 1403-1410.
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Hans Van Gossum & Thomas N. Sherratt. (2008) A dynamical model of sexual harassment in damselflies and its implications for female-limited polymorphism. Ecological Modelling 210:1-2, pages 212-220.
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HANS VAN GOSSUM, KIRSTEN BEIRINCKX, MARK R. FORBES & THOMAS N. SHERRATT. (2007) Do current hypotheses explain continental and seasonal variation in female morph frequencies of the damselfly, Nehalennia irene?. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 90:3, pages 501-508.
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Merrylee Ann McGuffin, Robert L. Baker & Mark R. Forbes. (2006) Detection and Avoidance of Fish Predators by Adult Enallagma Damselflies. Journal of Insect Behavior 19:1, pages 77-91.
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Hans VAN GOSSUM, Tim ADRIAENS, Henri DUMONT & Robby STOKS. (2004) Sex- and morph-specific predation risk: Colour or behaviour dependency?. European Journal of Entomology 101:3, pages 373-377.
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Ola M Fincke. (2004) Polymorphic signals of harassed female odonates and the males that learn them support a novel frequency-dependent model. Animal Behaviour 67:5, pages 833-845.
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Alex WongMyron L. SmithMark R. Forbes. (2003) Differentiation between subpopulations of a polychromatic damselfly with respect to morph frequencies, but not neutral genetic markers. Molecular Ecology 12:12, pages 3505-3513.
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Laura K. Sirot, H.Jane Brockmann, Christina Marnis & Giselle Muschett. (2003) Maintenance of a female-limited polymorphism in Ischnura ramburi (Zygoptera: Coenagrionidae). Animal Behaviour 66:4, pages 763-775.
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J.A Andrés, R.A Sánchez-Guillén & A Cordero Rivera. (2002) Evolution of female colour polymorphism in damselflies: testing the hypotheses. Animal Behaviour 63:4, pages 677-685.
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A Wong, M R Forbes & M L Smith. (2001) Characterization of AFLP markers in damselflies: prevalence of codominant markers and implications for population genetic applications. Genome 44:4, pages 677-684.
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T.N. Sherratt. (2008) The evolution of female‐limited polymorphisms in damselflies: a signal detection model. Ecology Letters 4:1, pages 22-29.
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H. Jane Brockmann. 2001. 1 51 .
Mark R. Forbes, Gina Schalk, J. Greg Miller & Jean M. L. Richardson. (1997) Male–female morph interactions in the damselfly Nehalennia irene (Hagen) . Canadian Journal of Zoology 75:2, pages 253-260.
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