Best Practices for Building and Curating Databases for Comparative Analyses
Biology Faculty Research
Part of the Life Sciences Commons
Works by Michele A. Johnson in Life Sciences
2022
2021
2020
Do Seasonal Glucocorticoid Changes Depend on Reproductive Investment? A Comparative Approach in Birds
Michele A Johnson
Baseline and Stress-Induced Corticosterone Levels Across Birds and Reptiles Do Not Reflect Urbanication Levels
Michele A Johnson
2019
HormoneBase, a Population-Level Database of Steroid Hormone Levels Across Vertebrates
Michele A Johnson
The Evolution of Androgen Receptor Expression and Behavior in Anolis Lizard Forelimb Muscles
Michele A Johnson
IUCN Conservation Status Does Not Predict Glucocortoid Concentrations in Reptiles and Birds
Michele A Johnson
Standing Variation and the Capacity for Change: Are Endocrine Phenotypes More Variable That Other Traits?
Michele A Johnson
Detecting Bias in Large-Scale Comparative Analyses: Methods for Expanding the Scope of Hypothesis-Testing with HormoneBase
Michele A Johnson
Do Seasonal Glucocorticoid Changes Depend on Reproductive Investment? A Comparative Approach in Birds
Michele A Johnson
Rapid Evolution of Testis Size Relative to Sperm Morphology Suggests that Post-Copulatory Selection Targets Sperm Number in Anolis Lizards
Michele A Johnson
Species-Specific Means and Within-Species Variance in Glucocorticoid Hormones and Speciation Rates in Birds
Michele A Johnson
Macroevolutionary Patterning in Glucocorticoids Suggests Different Selective Pressures Shape Baseline and Stress-Induced Levels
Michele A Johnson
2018
Illuminating Endocrine Evolution: The Power and Potential of Large-Scale Comparative Analyses
Michele A Johnson
Prey Availability Affects Territory Size, but Not Territorial Display Behavior, in Green Anole Lizards
Michele A Johnson
2017
How Do Lizards Determine Dominance? Applying Ranking Algorithms to Animal Social Behaviour
Eduardo Cabral Balreira
How Do Lizards Determine Dominance? Applying Ranking Algorithms to Animal Social Behaviour
Michele A Johnson
Why Do Curly Tail Lizards (Genus Leiocephalus) Curl Their Tails? An Assessment of Displays Toward Conspecifics and Predators
Michele A Johnson
2016
2015
Migration and the Evolution of Sexual Dichromatism: Evolutionary Loss of Female Coloration with Migration among Wood-Warblers
Biology Faculty Research
The Burden of Motherhood: The Effect of Reproductive Load on Female Lizard Locomotor, Foraging, and Social Behavior
Michele A Johnson
Behavioural display systems across nine Anolis lizard species: sexual dimorphisms in structure and function
Michele A Johnson