Amanda Hund

Amanda Hund
University of Minnesota Twin Cities | UMN · Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behaviour

About

34
Publications
3,114
Reads
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314
Citations
Citations since 2017
29 Research Items
309 Citations
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Introduction
Skills and Expertise

Publications

Publications (34)
Preprint
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The spectacular migration of the monarch butterfly is under threat from the loss of habitat and the decline of their milkweed host plants. In the northern part of their range, roadsides could potentially produce millions of monarchs annually due to high densities of milkweed, however roadside milkweed can accumulate chemicals from roads, such as so...
Article
From biofilms to whale pods, organisms across taxa live in groups, thereby accruing numerous diverse benefits of sociality. All social organisms, however, pay the inherent cost of increased resource competition. One expects that when resources become scarce, this cost will increase, causing group sizes to decrease. Indeed, this occurs in some speci...
Article
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(1) Generating a range of biological analogies is a key part of the bio-inspired design process. In this research, we drew on the creativity literature to test methods for increasing the diversity of these ideas. We considered the role of the problem type, the role of individual expertise (versus learning from others), and the effect of two interve...
Preprint
Avian incubation is a highly complex, adjustable behavior essential to embryo development and survival. When incubating, parents face a tradeoff between investing in incubation to maintain optimal temperatures for egg development or in self-maintenance behaviors to ensure their own survival and future reproduction. Because nest ectoparasites are co...
Preprint
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Measuring gene expression simultaneously in both hosts and symbionts offers a powerful approach to explore the biology underlying species interactions. Such dual or simultaneous RNAseq approaches have primarily been used to gain insight into gene function in model systems, but there is opportunity to expand and apply these tools in new ways to unde...
Article
Full-text available
Closely related populations often differ in resistance to a given parasite, as measured by infection success or failure. Yet, the immunological mechanisms of these evolved differences are rarely specified. Does resistance evolve via changes to the host's ability to recognize that an infection exists, actuate an effective immune response, or attenua...
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Sex chromosomes often bear distinct patterns of genetic variation due to unique patterns of inheritance and demography. The processes of mutation, recombination, genetic drift, and selection also influence rates of evolution on sex chromosomes differently than autosomes. Measuring such differences provides information about how these processes shap...
Article
Associations between parasite loads and sexual signal expression have long been the focus of research. However, our understanding of how sexual selection operates in the context of multiple parasite infections within the same host is still quite limited. We examined the expression of plumage coloration, which is sexually selected in North American...
Preprint
Full-text available
Closely related populations often differ in resistance to a given parasite, as measured by infection success or failure. Yet, the immunological mechanisms of these evolved differences are rarely specified. Does resistance evolve via changes to the host’s ability to recognize that an infection exists, actuate an effective immune response, or attenua...
Article
Full-text available
Hirundo is the most species-rich genus of the passerine swallow family (Hirundinidae) and has a cosmopolitan distribution. Here we report the complete, annotated mitochondrial genomes for 25 individuals from 10 of the 14 extant Hirundo species; these include representatives from four subspecies of the barn swallow, H. rustica. Mitogenomes were cons...
Article
Many closely related populations are distinguished by variation in sexual signals and this variation is hypothesized to play an important role in reproductive isolation and speciation. Within populations, there is considerable evidence that sexual signals provide information about the incidence and severity of parasite infections, but it remains un...
Preprint
Full-text available
From biofilms to whale pods, organisms have repeatedly converged on sociality as a strategy to improve individual fitness. Yet, it remains challenging to identify the most important drivers - and by extension, the evolutionary mechanisms - of sociality for particular species. Here, we present a conceptual framework, literature review, and model dem...
Article
We propose an application of network analysis to determine which traits and behaviors predict fertilizations within and between populations. This approach quantifies how reproductive behavior between individuals shapes patterns of selection and gene flow, filling an important gap in our understanding of the connection between evolutionary processes...
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Full-text available
Guiding undergraduates through the ecological research process can be incredibly rewarding and present opportunities to break down barriers to inclusion and diversity in scientific disciplines. At the same time, mentoring undergraduate researchers is a complicated process that requires time and flexibility. While many academics receive extensive gu...
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Full-text available
Abstract Animals use morphological signals such as ornamental traits or weaponry to mediate social interactions, and the extent of signal trait elaboration is often positively associated with reproductive success. By demonstrating relationships between signal traits and fitness, researchers often make inferences about how behaviour operates to shap...
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Effective mentoring is a key component of academic and career success that contributes to overall measures of productivity. Mentoring relationships also play an important role in mental health and in recruiting and retaining students from groups underrepresented in STEM fields. Despite these clear and measurable benefits, faculty generally do not r...
Article
Species barriers are tested in hybrid zones when gene flow occurs between hybridizing species. Hybridization can erode species barriers, lead to the introgression of adaptive traits, or remain stable through time. Outcomes in hybrid zones are influenced by divergence between the hybridizing taxa, behavior, ecology, and geography. Parasites and path...
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Full-text available
Parasite populations are never evenly distributed among the hosts they infect. Avian nest ectoparasites, such as mites, are no exception, as their distribution across the landscape is highly aggregated. It remains unclear if this pattern is driven by differences in transmission events alone, or if the environment that parasites inhabit after transm...
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Eusocial insects actively combat pathogen proliferation with a myriad of tactics, one of which is the removal of corpses from the nest, a behavior known as necrophoresis. Spatial patterns of corpse depositions by colonies of the western harvester ant, Pogonomyrmex occidentalis, were examined. Colonies were presented with nestmate and non-nestmate c...
Article
Nest-switching is an important breeding strategy for multiple-brooded bird species. When deciding whether or not to switch nests for subsequent breeding attempts, pairs must weigh the costs and benefits of various factors related to the number of fledglings of the first breeding attempt, the likelihood of nest predation, and qualities of the nest e...
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Full-text available
Vaquero-Alba and colleagues published a study in The Auk: Ornithological Advances comparing objective color measurements of plumage taken in the field directly on a bird's body to those taken in the lab on collected feathers arranged to emulate the appearance of a bird's natural plumage. Although the field measures of plumage color were less repeat...
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Full-text available
Sexual selection plays a key role in the diversification of numerous animal clades and may accelerate trait divergence during speciation. However, much of our understanding of this process comes from phylogenetic comparative studies, which rely on surrogate measures such as dimorphism that may not represent selection in wild populations. In this st...
Article
Nest ectoparasites can impose significant costs to altricial nestlings that are confined to the nest and dependent on parental care. These costs are often passed on to parents who may compensate for, or magnify, the direct costs of parasites on their nestlings through adjustments in parental care behaviour. If the effects of ectoparasites on nestli...
Article
Bird nests offer an ideal situation to manipulate ectoparasites and study how they impact hosts. Several methods are available to eliminate parasites from nests and each has its own suite of advantages and disadvantages. For example, recent toxicity research has revealed that some commonly used insecticides may not be suitable for use in experiment...

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