Jorge García-Campa

Jorge García-Campa
The National Museum of Natural Sciences · Evolutionary Ecology

PhD candidate
The National Museum of Natural Sciences-CSIC

About

11
Publications
1,465
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26
Citations
Citations since 2017
11 Research Items
26 Citations
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Publications

Publications (11)
Article
Full-text available
In many species, offspring display conspicuous coloration already early in life, even though they might be very vulnerable to predation at this stage. However, most attention has been drawn to the conspicuous plumage displayed by adult individuals in a sexual context, while other signaling functions have been explored much less. Here, we investigat...
Preprint
Full-text available
In many species, offspring display conspicuous adult-like colouration already early in life, even though they might be very vulnerable to predation at this stage. Yet, the signalling function of adult-like traits in nestlings has been little explored to date. Here, we investigated whether the yellow breast plumage of blue tit (Cyanistes caeruleus)...
Article
Full-text available
In bi-parental species, reproduction is not only a crucial life-history stage where individuals must take fitness-related decisions, but these decisions also need to be adjusted to the behavioural strategies of other individuals. Hence, communication is required, which could be facilitated by informative signals. Yet, these signalling traits might...
Article
Full-text available
Parents allocate resources to offspring to increase their survival and to maximize their own fitness, while this investment implies costs to their condition and future reproduction. Parents are hence expected to optimally allocate their resources. They should invest equally in all their offspring under good conditions, but when parental capacity is...
Preprint
Full-text available
Parents allocate resources to offspring to increase their survival and to maximize their own fitness, while this investment implies costs to their condition and future reproduction. Parents are hence expected to optimally allocate their resources. They should invest equally in all their offspring under good conditions, but when parental capacity is...
Preprint
Full-text available
In bi-parental species, reproduction is not only a crucial life-history stage where individuals must take fitness-relevant decisions, but these decisions also need to be adjusted to the behavioural strategies of a partner. Hence, communication is required, which could be facilitated by condition-dependent signals of parental quality. Yet, these tra...
Article
Full-text available
During egg laying, females face a trade‐off between self‐maintenance and investment into current reproduction, since providing eggs with resources is energetically demanding, in particular if females lay one egg per day. However, the costs of egg laying not only relate to energetic requirements, but also depend on the availability of specific resou...
Poster
Full-text available
During egg laying, female birds face a trade-off between self-maintenance and investment into current reproduction. Providing eggs with resources is energetically demanding, since in most species females lay one egg per day. However, the costs of egg laying not only relate to energetic requirements, but also depend on the availability of specific r...
Preprint
During egg laying, female birds face a trade-off between self-maintenance and investment into current reproduction. Providing eggs with resources is energetically demanding, since in most species females lay one egg per day. However, the costs of egg laying not only relate to energetic requirements, but also depend on the availability of specific r...
Poster
Full-text available
Mothers can influence offspring phenotype through their allocation into eggs, which may have profound consequences for offspring ontogeny and survival. However, it is little known how these early maternal effects modulate the expression of signals of quality in their offspring. This is striking, given that in many animals offspring express ornament...
Article
Full-text available
Birds exhibit a extraordinary diversity of plumage pigmentation patterns. It has been overlooked, however, that complex patterns can be produced only with the contribution of melanins because these are the only pigments under direct cellular control. We tested this hypothesis for the first time examining the plumage patterning of all species of ext...

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Projects

Projects (2)
Project
The main goal is to determine whether mothers program the social phenotype of their offspring, and to uncover the physiological mechanisms that are involved and their adaptive value.