Alison M. Pischedda, M.Sc.
Affiliations: | EEMB | University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, United States |
Area:
Sexual Selection, Sexual ConflictGoogle:
"Alison Pischedda"Cross-listing: Evolution Tree
Parents
Sign in to add mentorAdam Chippindale | grad student | Queens University | ||
William Rice | grad student | 2010 | UC Santa Barbara | |
(Sexual selection and sexual conflict in a Drosophila melanogaster model system.) | ||||
Thomas L. Turner | post-doc | UC Santa Barbara |
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Publications
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Lev A, Gutierrez AI, Srinivasan AS, et al. (2025) Indirect fitness benefits can reinforce the direct fitness benefits of male mate choice. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution |
Freed GS, Martinez IG, Lev A, et al. (2025) Genetic Variation in Male Mate Choice for Large Females in . Ecology and Evolution. 15: e70794 |
Stewart AD, Herrick CM, Fitzgibbon TR, et al. (2024) Life history changes associated with over 400 generations of artificial selection on body size in Drosophila. Journal of Evolutionary Biology |
Lev A, Pischedda A. (2023) Male size does not affect the strength of male mate choice for high-quality females in Drosophila melanogaster. Journal of Evolutionary Biology |
Anastasio OE, Sinclair CS, Pischedda A. (2023) Cryptic male mate choice for high-quality females reduces male postcopulatory success in future matings. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution |
Sinclair CS, Lisa SF, Pischedda A. (2021) Does sexual experience affect the strength of male mate choice for high-quality females in ? Ecology and Evolution. 11: 16981-16992 |
Pischedda A, Shahandeh MP, Turner TL. (2019) The loci of behavioral evolution: evidence that Fas2 and tilB underlie differences in pupation site choice behavior between Drosophila melanogaster and D. simulans. Molecular Biology and Evolution |
Shahandeh MP, Pischedda A, Rodriguez JM, et al. (2019) The Genetics of Male Pheromone Preference Difference Between and . G3 (Bethesda, Md.) |
Shahandeh MP, Pischedda A, Turner TL. (2017) Male mate choice via cuticular hydrocarbon pheromones drives reproductive isolation between Drosophila species. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution |
Pischedda A, Chippindale AK. (2017) Direct benefits of choosing a high fitness mate can offset the indirect costs associated with intralocus sexual conflict. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution |