Geographic variation in behaviour: an introduction
Caitlin R. Gabor
1
, Andrea S. Aspbury
1
and Rafael L. Rodríguez
2
1
Department of Biology, Population and Conservation Biology Program, Texas State University,
San Marcos, Texas, USA and
2
Behavioral and Molecular Ecology Group, Department of
Biological Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
Keywords: environmental variation, phenotypic plasticity, reproductive isolation,
sexual selection, speciation.
INTRODUCTION
Environments vary across space and time, and behavioural divergence among populations is
commonplace. Differences in behaviour may represent genetic divergence or phenotypic
plasticity, and arise from abiotic or biotic factors. In turn, such differences in behaviour may
promote reproductive isolation and speciation, and they may also influence how traits such
as mating displays relate to fitness. With these realizations there has been an enormous
increase in the number of studies and techniques used to study geographic variation in
behaviour, especially since the publication of Foster and Endler’s (1999) book, Geographic
Variation in Behavior: Perspectives on Evolutionary Mechanisms. The new body of work
makes important contributions to our understanding of the patterns, processes, and
consequences of geographic variation in behaviour. This work remains to be incorporated
into mainstream evolutionary theory. For example, researchers still too often characterize
species with single populations, and even in comparative studies researchers often use a
single estimate for an entire species.
This special collection originated from the symposium ‘Geographic Variation in
Behaviour’ at the 2011 Annual Animal Behavior Society meeting in Bloomington, Indiana.
Caitlin R. Gabor and Andrea S. Aspbury organized the symposium. As organizers of the
symposium, and together with Rafael L. Rodríguez as editors of this special volume, our
goal was to attract the best possible set of papers. All the contributed papers emphasize the
connection between geographic variation and speciation, and provide empirical insights
into this connection. The contributed papers also represent varied approaches to under-
standing animal behaviour – the different authors use diverse techniques and perspectives,
and do so at varying taxonomic scales. With this collection we wish to understand
how research on geographic variation in behaviour is shaping our understanding of
the mechanisms that result in geographic variation and its contributions to reproductive
isolation and speciation.
Correspondence: C.R. Gabor, Department of Biology, Texas State University, 601 University Drive, San Marcos,
TX 78666, USA. e-mail: gabor@txstate.edu
Consult the copyright statement on the inside front cover for non-commercial copying policies.
Evolutionary Ecology Research, 2013, 15: 601–604
© 2013 Caitlin R. Gabor