Table of Contents
Part I. Doing Science and Studying Behavior
*Edward O. Wilson. 1998.
Scientists, scholars, knaves and fools.
86:6-7.
*James Woodward and David Goodstein. 1996.
Conduct, misconduct and the structure of science.
84:479-490.
*George D. Gopen and Judith A. Swan. 1990.
The science of scientific writing.
78:550-558.
*Ernst Mayr. 1974.
Behavior programs and evolutionary strategies.
62:650-659.
*Kay E. Holekamp and Paul W. Sherman. 1989.
Why male ground squirrels disperse.
77:232-239.
*Sarah Blaffer Hrdy. 1977.
Infanticide as a primate reproductive strategy.
65:40-49.
Part II. The Adaptive Value of Social Behavior
*Thomas D. Seeley. 1989.
The honey bee colony as a super-organism.
77:546-553.
*Thomas D. Seeley, P. Kirk Visscher, and Kevin M. Passino. 2006.
Group decision making in honey bee swarms.
94:220-229.
*David Sloan Wilson and Edward O. Wilson. 2008.
Evolution for the good of the group.
96:380-391.
*Stephen T. Emlen, Peter H. Wrege, and Natalie J. Demong. 1995.
Making decisions in the family: An evolutionary perspective.
83:148-157.
*Bernd Heinrich and John Marzluff. 1995.
Why ravens share.
83: 342-349.
*Rodney L. Honeycutt. 1992.
Naked mole-rats.
80:43-53.
*Warren G. Holmes and Paul W. Sherman. 1983.
Kin recognition in animals.
71:46-55.
*Robert R. Provine. 2005.
Yawning.
93:532-539.
Part III. The Adaptive Value of Reproductive Behavior
*Randy Thornhill and Darryl T. Gwynne. 1986.
The evolution of sexual differences in insects.
74:382-389.
*Robert R. Warner. 1984.
Mating behavior and hermaphroditism in coral reef fishes.
72:128-136.
*William G. Eberhard. 1990.
Animal genitalia and female choice.
78:134-141.
*Peton M. West. 2005.
The lion's mane.
93:226-235.
*Lowell L. Getz and C. Sue Carter. 1996.
Prairie-vole partnerships.
84:56-62.
*Douglas W. Mock, Hugh Drummond, and Christopher H. Stinson. 1990.
Avian siblicide.
78:438-449.
*David M. Buss. 1994.
The strategies of human mating.
82:238-249.
Part IV. The Evolutionary History of Behavior
*Bert Holldobler and Edward O. Wilson. 1983.
The evolution of communal nest-weaving in ants.
71:490-499.
*William A. Shear. 1994.
Untangling the evolution of the web.
82:256-266.
*Gerald Borgia. 1995.
Why do bowerbirds build bowers?
83:542-547.
*Lyudmila N. Trut. 1999.
Early canid domestication: The farm-fox experiment.
87:160-167.
*Paul Sherman and Samual M. Flaxman. 2001.
Protecting ourselves from food.
89:142-151.
Part V. The Mechanisms of Behavior
*Gene E. Robinson. 1998.
From society to genes with the honey bee.
86:456-462.
*John C. Wingfield, Gregory F. Ball, Alfred M. Dufty, Jr., Robert E. Hegner, and Marilyn Ramenofsky. 1987.
Testosterone and aggression in birds
75:602-608.
*Stephan J. Schoech. 1998.
Physiology of helping in Florida scrub-jays.
86:70-77.
*Andrew H. Bass. 1996.
Shaping brain sexuality.
84:352-363.
*Mike May. 1991.
Aerial defense tactics of flying insects.
79:316-328.
Part VI. Communication Behavior at Four Levels of Analysis
*William A. Searcy and Stephen Nowicki. 2008.
ird song and the problem of honest communication.
96:114-121.
*Meredith J. West and Andrew P. King. 1990.
Mozart's starling.7
8:106-114.
*Walter Piper, Jay Mager, and Charles Walcott. 2011.
Marking loons.
99:220-227.
*Kendra Sewall. 2012.
Vocal matching in animals.
100:306-315.
*Todd M. Freeberg, Jeffrey R. Lucas, and Indrikis Krams. 2012.
The complex call of the Carolina chickadee.
100:398-407.
*Madallena Bearzi and Craig Stanford. 2010.
A bigger, better brain.
98:402-409.