4 results match your criteria: "University of Cambridge Cambridge U.K.[Affiliation]"
1. Condition-dependent traits can act as honest signals of mate quality, with fitter individuals being able to display preferred phenotypes. Nutrition is known to be an important determinant of individual condition, with diet known to affect many secondary sexual traits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Entomol
October 2016
Butterfly Genetics Group, Department of Zoology University of Cambridge Cambridge U.K.; Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Panama City Panama.
1. Birds are considered to be the primary selective agents for warning colouration in butterflies, and select for aposematic mimicry by learning to avoid brightly coloured prey after unpleasant experiences. It has long been thought that bright colouration plays an important role in promoting the avoidance of distasteful prey by birds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSyst Entomol
January 2016
University Museum of Zoology, University of Cambridge Cambridge U.K.
In this paper we present a thorough revision of the sciathis species group of the butterfly genus Bicyclus (Kirby). Type materials are discussed and in several cases lectotypes are assigned to specimens from original type series. Four new, and morphologically distinct, species are described (B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 2013, an opportunity arose in England to develop an agri-environment package for wild pollinators, as part of the new Countryside Stewardship scheme launched in 2015. It can be understood as a 'policy window', a rare and time-limited opportunity to change policy, supported by a narrative about pollinator decline and widely supported mitigating actions. An agri-environment package is a bundle of management options that together supply sufficient resources to support a target group of species.
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