PS 108 - Latebreaking: Life History Theory And Evolution

Friday, August 10, 2012: 8:30 AM-10:30 AM
Exhibit Hall, Oregon Convention Center
 Latitude of origin determines life history, nutrient demand and stoichiometric response to temperature in Rana temporaria tadpoles – combining ecology with evolution
Antonia Liess, Umeå University; Owen Rowe, Umeå University; Junwen Guo, Umeå University; Gustaf Thomsson, Umeå University; Martin I. Lind, University of Sheffield
 Effects of male age and experience on bi-parental reproductive output and allocation in a burying beetle
Mason L. Segura, Brigham Young University; Peter J. Meyers, Brigham Young University; Mark C. Belk, Brigham Young University; Curtis Creighton, Purdue University, Calumet
 Coordinating flowering and germination across seasonal environments: linked process-based models predict genotype and environment specific life history expression
Liana T. Burghardt, Duke University; Amity Wilczek, Deep Springs College; Jessica Metcalf, Oxford University; Susan E. Meyer, USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station; Kathleen Donohue, Duke University; Johanna Schmitt, University of California Davis
 Does habitat structure affect phylogenetic and trait diversification in larval and adult anurans differently?
Décio T. Corrêa, Universidade Estadual de Campinas; Denise C. Rossa–Feres, Universidade Estadual Paulista, IBILCE; Ricardo J. Sawaya, Universidade Federal de São Paulo
Cancelled
 Variation in allocation toward growth in burying beetles with size determined competitive interactions
Liem Hieu Nguyen, Brigham Young University; Mark C. Belk, Brigham Young University; Clinton T. Laidlaw, Brigham Young University
 Predicting freshwater fish life history tactics: Filtering potential life history diversity via habitat scenarios using Ecosystem Diagnosis and Treatment
Willis McConnaha, ICF International; Jesse D.M. Schwartz, ICF International; Laura E. McMullen, Oregon State University
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