Rodent Societies: An Ecological & Evolutionary Perspective

(Greg DeLong) #1

non-social learning in adult rats. Learning and Cognition
43 : 177– 91.
Levy, N. 1977. Sound communication in the California ground
squirrel. Master’s thesis, California State University at North-
ridge.
Lewis, A. W. 1973. Seasonal population changes in the cactus
mouse, Peromyscus eremicus. Southwestern Naturalist
18 : 85 – 93.
Lewis, S. E., and A. E. Pusey. 1997. Factors influencing the occur-
rence of communal care in plural breeding mammals. In Co-
operative breeding in mammals,ed. N. G. Solomon and J. A.
French, 335 – 63. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Lewis, S. M., and S. N. Austad. 1994. Sexual selection in flour
beetles: The relationship between sperm precedence and male
olfactory attractiveness. Behavioral Ecology5 : 219 –24.
Lewison, R. 1998. Infanticide in the hippopotamus: Evidence
for polygynous ungulates. Ethology Ecology and Evolution
10 : 277– 86.
Lewontin, R. C. 1968. The effect of differential viability on the
population dynamics of talleles in the house mouse. Evolu-
tion22 : 262 –73.
Lewontin, R. C. 2001a. Gene, organism and environment. In
Cycles of contingency: Developmental systems and evolution,
ed. S. Oyama, P. E. Griffiths, and R. D. Gray, 59 – 66. Cam-
bridge: The MIT Press.
———. 2001b. Gene, organism and environment: A new intro-
duction. In Cycles of contingency: Developmental systems
and evolution,ed. S. Oyama, P. E. Griffiths, and R. D. Gray,
55 –57. Cambridge: The MIT Press.
Lewontin, R., and L. Dunn. 1960. The evolutionary dynamics of
a polymorphism in the house mouse. Genetics45 : 705 –22.
Lewontin, R. C., and R. Levins. 1978. Evoluzione. Enciclopedia
Einaudi,vol. 5, 995 –1051.
Li, W. H., W. A. Hide, and D. Graur. 1992. Origin of rodents
and guinea-pigs. Nature359 : 277–78.
Libhaber, N., and D. Eilam. 2002. Social vole parents force their
mates to baby-sit. Developmental Psychobiology41 : 236 – 40.
———. 2004. Parental investment in social voles varies and is
relatively independent of litter size. Journal of Mammalogy
85 : 748 –55.
Lidicker, W. Z., Jr. 1975. The role of dispersal in the demogra-
phy of small mammals. In Small mammals: Their production
and population dynamics,ed. F. B. Golley, K. Petrusewicz,
and L. Ryszkowski, 103 –28. Cambridge: Cambridge Univer-
sity Press.
———. 1976. Social behaviour and density regulation in house
mice living in large enclosures. Journal of Animal Ecology
45 : 677– 97.
———. 1978. Regulation of numbers in small mammal popula-
tions —historical reflections and a synthesis. In Populations of
small mammals under natural conditions,Special publication
vol. 5, ed. D. P. Snyder, 122 – 41. Pittsburgh: Pymatuning
Laboratory of Ecology, University of Pittsburgh.
———. 1979a. Analysis of two freely-growing enclosed popu-
lations of the California vole. Journal of Mammalogy60 :
447– 66.
———. 1979b. A clarification of interactions in ecological sys-
tems. BioScience29 : 475 –77.
———. 1985. Population structuring as a factor in understand-
ing microtine cycles. Acta Zoologica Fennica173 : 23 –27.
———. 1988. Solving the enigma of microtine “cycles.” Journal
of Mammalogy69 : 225 –35.


———, ed. 1989. Rodents, a world survey of species of con-
servation concern.Occasional Papers no. 4. Gland, Switzer-
land: IUCN Rodent Specialist Group, Species Survival
Commission.
———. 1991. In defense of a multifactor perspective in popula-
tion ecology. Journal of Mammalogy 72 :631–35.
———. 1994. Population ecology. In Seventy-five years of mam-
malogy (1919 –1994),Special publication no. 11, ed. E. C.
Birney and J. R. Choate, 323 – 47. American Society of Mam-
malogists.
———. 1995. The landscape concept: Something old, something
new. In Landscape approaches in mammalian ecology and
conservation,ed. W. Z. Lidicker, Jr., 3 –19. Minneapolis: Uni-
versity of Minnesota Press.
———. 1998. Zapus trinotatusRhoads 1895, Pacific jumping
mouse. In North American rodents, status survey and
conservation action plan,ed. D. J. Hafner, E. Yensen, and
G. L. Kirkland, Jr. 123 –24. Gland, Switzerland: Rodent
Specialist Group, Species Survival Commission, IUCN.
———. 1999. Responses of mammals to habitat edges: An over-
view. Landscape Ecology14 : 333 – 43.
———. 2000. A food web /landscape interaction model for
microtine rodent density cycles. Oikos91 : 435 – 45.
———. 2002. From dispersal to landscapes: Progress in our un-
derstanding of population dynamics. Acta TheriologicaSuppl.
no. 1. 47 : 23 –37.
Lidicker, W. Z., Jr., and W. D. Koenig. 1996. Responses of ter-
restrial vertebrates to habitat edges and corridors. In Meta-
populations and wildlife conservation,ed. D. R. McCullough,
85 –109. Covelo, CA: Island Press.
Lidicker, W. Z., Jr., and J. L. Patton. 1987. Patterns of dispersal
and genetic structure in populations of small rodents. In
Mammalian dispersal patterns: The effects of social struc-
ture on population genetics,ed. B. D. Chepko-Sade and
Z. T. Halpin, 144 – 61. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Lidicker, W. Z., Jr., and J. A. Peterson. 1999. Responses of small
mammals to habitat edges. In Landscape ecology of small
mammals,ed. G. W. Barrett and J. D. Peles, 211–27. New
York: Springer-Verlag.
Lidicker, W. Z., Jr., J. O. Wolff, L. N. Lidicker, and M. H. Smith.


  1. Utilization of a habitat mosaic by cotton rats during a
    population decline. Landscape Ecology6 : 259 – 68.
    Liebert, A. E., and P. T. Starks. (2004). The action component of
    recognition systems: A focus on the response. Annales Zoo-
    logici Fennici41 : 747– 64.
    Lifjeld, J. T., P. O. Dunn, and D. F. Westneat. 1994. Sexual selec-
    tion by sperm competition in birds: Male-male competition or
    female choice? Journal of Avian Biology25 : 244 –50.
    Lima, S. L. 1992. Life in a multi-predator environment: Some
    considerations for anti-predatory vigilance. Annales Zoologici
    Fennici29 : 217–26.
    Lima, S. L. 1998. Nonlethal effects in the ecology of predator-
    prey interactions. Bioscience48 : 25 –34.
    ———. 2002. Putting predators back into behavioral predator-
    prey interactions.Trends in Ecology and Evolution17 : 70 –75.
    Lima, S. L., and P. A. Bednekoff. 1999. Temporal variation in
    danger drives antipredatory behaviour: The predation risk al-
    location hypothesis. American Naturalist153 : 649 –59.
    Lima, S. L., and L. M. Dill. 1990. Behavioral decisions made un-
    der the risk of predation: A review and prospectus. Canadian
    Journal of Zoology68 : 619 – 40.
    Lima, S. L., T. J. Valone, and T. Caraco. 1985. Foraging-


References 549
Free download pdf