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104. The early‐life environment and individual plasticity in life‐history traits.

106. Parental effects alter the adaptive value of an adult behavioural trait

121. A limit on the extent to which increased egg size can compensate for a poor postnatal environment revealed experimentally in the burying beetle, Nicrophorus vespilloides.

122. Interspecific interactions change the outcome of sexual conflict over prehatching parental investment in the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides.

128. Egg Speckling Patterns Do Not Advertise Offspring Quality or Influence Male Provisioning in Great Tits.

129. Imperfectly camouflaged avian eggs: artefact or adaptation?

130. High rates of infidelity in the Grey Fantail Rhipidura albiscapa suggest that testis size may be a better correlate of extra-pair paternity than sexual dimorphism.

131. A growth cost of begging in captive canary chicks.

132. Sexual dimorphism in head size in wild burying beetles.

133. Niche Construction Through an Optimal Host Brood Size Is Supported in Brown‐Headed Cowbirds: A Response to M. Soler.

134. Seasonal Patterns of Resource Use Within Natural Populations of Burying Beetles.

135. Larval environmental conditions influence plasticity in resource use by adults in the burying beetle, Nicrophorus vespilloides.

136. Conflict within species determines the value of a mutualism between species

137. No evidence of a cleaning mutualism between burying beetles and their phoretic mite

138. Aposematism in the burying beetle? Dual function of anal fluid in parental care and chemical defence

139. Social immunity of the family: parental contributions to a public good modulated by brood size

140. A direct physiological trade-off between personal and social immunity

141. Age-specific reproductive investment in female burying beetles: independent effects of state and risk of death

142. Sexual division of antibacterial resource defence in breeding burying beetles, Nicrophorus vespilloides

143. Selection on the joint actions of pairs leads to divergent adaptation and coadaptation of care-giving parents during pre-hatching care.

144. Biomechanical adaptations enable phoretic mite species to occupy distinct spatial niches on host burying beetles.

145. A weapons–testes trade-off in males is amplified in female traits.

146. Parental care shapes the evolution of molecular genetic variation.

148. Parental care and sibling competition independently increase phenotypic variation among burying beetle siblings.

149. The evolutionary demise of a social interaction: experimentally induced loss of traits involved in the supply and demand of care.

150. Parental care results in a greater mutation load, for which it is also a phenotypic antidote.

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