M. Catherine Duryea

Affiliations: 
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, United States 
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"M. Duryea"

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Ryan G. Calsbeek grad student 2014 Dartmouth
 (Sexual selection and sexual conflict in Anolis lizards: From molecules to populations.)
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Publications

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Willink B, Duryea MC, Wheat C, et al. (2020) Changes in gene expression during female reproductive development in a color polymorphic insect. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution
Svensson EI, Willink B, Duryea MC, et al. (2019) Temperature drives pre-reproductive selection and shapes the biogeography of a female polymorphism. Ecology Letters
Willink B, Duryea MC, Svensson EI. (2019) Macroevolutionary Origin and Adaptive Function of a Polymorphic Female Signal Involved in Sexual Conflict. The American Naturalist. 194: 707-724
Duryea MC, Bergeron P, Clare-Salzler Z, et al. (2016) Field estimates of parentage reveal sexually antagonistic selection on body size in a population of Anolis lizards. Ecology and Evolution. 6: 7024-7031
Logan ML, Duryea MC, Molnar OR, et al. (2016) Spatial variation in climate mediates gene flow across an island archipelago. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution
Calsbeek R, Duryea MC, Goedert D, et al. (2015) Intralocus sexual conflict, adaptive sex allocation, and the heritability of fitness. Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Duryea MC, Zamudio KR, Brasileiro CA. (2015) Vicariance and marine migration in continental island populations of a frog endemic to the Atlantic Coastal forest. Heredity. 115: 225-34
Schaeffer RN, Phillips CR, Duryea MC, et al. (2014) Nectar yeasts in the tall Larkspur Delphinium barbeyi (Ranunculaceae) and effects on components of pollinator foraging behavior. Plos One. 9: e108214
Calsbeek R, Duryea MC, Parker E, et al. (2014) Sex-biased juvenile dispersal is adaptive but does not create genetic structure in island lizards Behavioral Ecology. 25: 1157-1163
Duryea MC, Kern AD, Cox RM, et al. (2013) A novel application of Approximate Bayesian Computation for detecting male reproductive advantages due to mating order Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 67: 1867-1875
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