Ana Cristina R Gomes
Overview
Explore the profile of Ana Cristina R Gomes including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
Author names and details appear as published. Due to indexing inconsistencies, multiple individuals may share a name, and a single author may have variations. MedLuna displays this data as publicly available, without modification or verification
Snapshot
Snapshot
Articles
5
Citations
11
Followers
0
Related Specialties
Related Specialties
Co-Authors
Co-Authors
Published In
Published In
Affiliations
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
1.
Beltrao P, Gomes A, Cardoso G
Proc Biol Sci
. 2023 Jun;
290(2000):20230206.
PMID: 37312555
Bullying consists of preferentially attacking individuals lowest in the dominance hierarchy, and its functions are unclear because the most subordinate individuals do not pose social challenges to the aggressor. Instead,...
2.
Trigo S, Gomes A, Cardoso S, Teixeira M, Cardoso G, Soares M
Behav Processes
. 2020 Sep;
181:104246.
PMID: 32946953
While vivid colours in sexual signals can provide information on individual quality, vivid colours in interspecific signals have been interpreted mostly as indicating species identity and maximizing signal detection. Here...
3.
Gomes A, Cardoso G
Proc Biol Sci
. 2020 Apr;
287(1926):20200525.
PMID: 32345155
Environmental instability (i.e. environments changing often) can select fixed phenotypes because of the lag time of plastically adapting to environmental changes, known as the lag-time constraint. Because behaviour can change...
4.
Gomes A, Cardoso G
Evolution
. 2018 Nov;
72(12):2608-2616.
PMID: 30421418
Research in sexual selection assumes that individuals attempt to choose high-quality mates, and that sexual signals evolve to indicate high quality. But it may often be more important to instead...
5.
Gomes A, Sorenson M, Cardoso G
Evolution
. 2016 Oct;
70(12):2823-2838.
PMID: 27718251
Although sexual ornamentation mediates reproductive isolation, comparative evidence does not support the hypothesis that stronger sexual selection promotes speciation. Prior analyses have neglected the possibility that decreases in ornamentation may...