Ecological determinants of sex roles and female sexual selection
Robin M. Hare and Leigh W. Simmons
Integrating nutritional and behavioral ecology: Mutual benefits and new Frontiers
Nathan I. Morehouse, David Raubenheimer, Adam Kay and Susan M. Bertram
Copulatory behavior and its relationship to genital morphology
Patricia L.R. Brennan and Dara N. Orbach
Evolution of female coloration: What have we learned from birds in general and blue tits in particular
Claire Doutrelant, Amélie Fargevieille and Arnaud Grégoire
Variation, plasticity, and alternative mating tactics: Revisiting what we know about the socially monogamous prairie vole
Jesus E. Madrid, Karen J. Parker and Alexander G. Ophir
Can't see the "hood" for the trees: Can avian cooperative breeding currently be understood using the phylogenetic comparative method?
Andrew Cockburn
Marc Naguib is professor in Behavioural Ecology at the Animal Sciences Department of Wageningen University, The Netherlands. He studied biology at the Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany and received his PhD (1995) at UNC Chapel Hill, NC in the US. After his PhD held positions at the Freie Universitaet Berlin (1995-1999) and Bielefeld University (2000-2007) in Germany, and at the Netherlands Institute of Ecology (2008-2011), until he was appointed in 2011 as Chair of the Behavioural Ecology Group at Wageningen University, The Netherlands. He is specialized in vocal communication, social behaviour, animal personality and the effects of conditions experienced during early development on behaviour and life history traits, mainly using song birds as model. His research group is also involved in animal welfare research using farm animals. He has served for many years on the council of the Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour (ASAB) and of the Ethologische Gesellschaft. He published > 80 scientific publications and has been Editor for Advances in the Study of Behaviour since 2003. Since 2014 he is Executive Editor.