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Published: 24 April 2025
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Journal Article
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Nadine Tardent and others
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, voaf046, https://doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voaf046
Published: 24 April 2025
Journal Article
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Cécile Molinier and others
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, voaf044, https://doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voaf044
Published: 22 April 2025
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Published: 22 April 2025
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Published: 17 April 2025
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Published: 17 April 2025
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Journal Article
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Tom Parée and Henrique Teotónio
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, voaf028, https://doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voaf028
Published: 17 April 2025
Journal Article
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
João C S Nascimento and Mathias M Pires
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, voaf043, https://doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voaf043
Published: 17 April 2025
Journal Article
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Yawako W Kawaguchi and Masato Yamamichi
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, voaf041, https://doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voaf041
Published: 17 April 2025
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Published: 17 April 2025
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Journal Article
Natália S Porzio and Paulo G Mota
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, voaf035, https://doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voaf035
Published: 12 April 2025
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Published: 12 April 2025
Figure 2. Illustration of predictors of song, dance, colour complexity, and brilliance represented by the average beta standard (regression coefficient) and its confidence intervals (AIC-weighted CI 95%) obtained by the multiple PGLS models.
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Published: 12 April 2025
Figure 1. Representation of a maximum clade credibility tree obtained from a sample of 1,000 (birdtree), with the scale of traits (song, dance, and colour) complexity on the right. Figures illustrate the diversity of dance elements produced by males in manakin species: different postures by (A) P. erythrocep
Journal Article
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Anjali Gupta and others
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, voaf040, https://doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voaf040
Published: 09 April 2025
Journal Article
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Urszula Zielenkiewicz and others
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, voaf039, https://doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voaf039
Published: 04 April 2025
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Published: 04 April 2025
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Journal Article
German Lagunas-Robles and others
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, Volume 38, Issue 4, April 2025, Pages 543–553, https://doi.org/10.1093/jeb/voaf023
Published: 02 April 2025
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Published: 02 April 2025
Figure 1. A phylogeny of Formica species with known supergene haplotypes and social forms. The tree is based on phylogenetic relationships established in Borowiec et al. (2021) , Purcell et al. (2021) , and Sigeman et al. (2024) . The known social forms for each species are provided. Social forms are den
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Published: 02 April 2025
Figure 2. Principal component analysis (PCA) reveals that the majority of individuals in the study are M / M at the chromosome 3 supergene. Each point represents an individual. The individual’s species is represented by its shape. The individual’s haplotype (haploid males) or genotype (diploid workers) is i
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Published: 02 April 2025
Figure 3. Within-nest relatedness was used to infer whether a nest was monogyne or polygyne. Each point represents a pairwise comparison between workers from the same nest. Points represent full-sibling pairwise relationships (pairwise R  ≥ 0.55), pairs of related individuals (pairwise R between 0.19 and 0