bioRxiv
Testing frameworks for early life effects: the developmental constraints and adaptive response hypotheses do not explain key fertility outcomes in wild female baboons
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Rosenbaum, S; Malani, A; Lea, A; Tung, J; Alberts, S; Archie, E
2024
Duke Scholars
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Rosenbaum, S., Malani, A., Lea, A., Tung, J., Alberts, S., & Archie, E. (2024). Testing frameworks for early life effects: the developmental constraints and adaptive response hypotheses do not explain key fertility outcomes in wild female baboons. bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.04.23.590627
Rosenbaum, Stacy, Anup Malani, Amanda Lea, Jenny Tung, Susan Alberts, and Elizabeth Archie. “Testing frameworks for early life effects: the developmental constraints and adaptive response hypotheses do not explain key fertility outcomes in wild female baboons.” BioRxiv, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.04.23.590627.
Rosenbaum S, Malani A, Lea A, Tung J, Alberts S, Archie E. Testing frameworks for early life effects: the developmental constraints and adaptive response hypotheses do not explain key fertility outcomes in wild female baboons. bioRxiv. 2024.
Rosenbaum, Stacy, et al. “Testing frameworks for early life effects: the developmental constraints and adaptive response hypotheses do not explain key fertility outcomes in wild female baboons.” BioRxiv, 2024. Epmc, doi:10.1101/2024.04.23.590627.
Rosenbaum S, Malani A, Lea A, Tung J, Alberts S, Archie E. Testing frameworks for early life effects: the developmental constraints and adaptive response hypotheses do not explain key fertility outcomes in wild female baboons. bioRxiv. 2024.