Mark Kirkpatrick

Section of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin

Publications

1979. Kirkpatrick, M., and R.K. Selander. Genetics of speciation in lake whitefishes in the Allegash Basin. Evolution 33: 478-485.

1981. Kirkpatrick, M. Spatial and age dependent patterns of growth in New England black birch. American Journal of Botany 68: 535-543.

1982a. Kirkpatrick, M. Sexual selection and the evolution of female choice. Evolution 36: 1-12.

1982b. Kirkpatrick, M. Quantum evolution and punctuated equilibria in continuous genetic characters. American Naturalist 119: 833-843.

1984a. Kirkpatrick, M. Revenge of the ugly duckling. Review of P. Bateson, ed. Mate Choice. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Evolution 38: 704-706.

1984b. Kirkpatrick, M. Demographic models based on size, not age, for organisms with indeterminate growth. Ecology 65: 1874-1884.

1985. Kirkpatrick, M. Evolution of female mate choice and male parental investment in polygynous species: the demise of the "sexy son". American Naturalist 125: 788-810.

1986a. Kirkpatrick, M. The handicap theory of sexual selection does not work. American Naturalist 127: 222-240.

1986b. Kirkpatrick, M. Sexual selection and cycling parasites: A simulation study of Hamilton's hypothesis. Journal of Theoretical Biology 119: 263-271.

1987a. Kirkpatrick, M., and J.J. Bull. Sex ratio selection with migration: Does Fisher's result hold? Evolution 41: 218-221.

1987b. Slatkin, M., and M. Kirkpatrick. Extrapolating quantitative genetic theory to evolutionary problems. Pages 283-293 in M.D. Huttle (ed.), The Evolutionary Genetics of Invertebrate Behavior. Plenum, New York.

1987c. Kirkpatrick, M. Sexual selection by female choice in polygynous animals. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 18: 43-70.

1987d. Kirkpatrick, M. The evolutionary forces acting on female mating preferences in polygynous animals. Pages 67–82 in J.W. Bradbury and M.B. Andersson (eds.), Sexual Selection: Testing the Alternatives. Dahlem Conference Proceedings. John Wiley, Chichester.

1987e. Heisler, L., and eleven others. The evolution of mating preferences and attractive traits. Group report. Pages 96-118 in J.W. Bradbury and M.B. Andersson (eds.), Sexual Selection: Testing the Alternatives. Dahlem Conference Proceedings. John Wiley, Chichester.

1988a. Kirkpatrick, M. Limits on adaptation. Review of V. Loeschcke (ed.), Genetic Constraints on Adaptive Evolution. Springer-Verlag, Berlin. Science 240: 342.

1988b. Price, T., M. Kirkpatrick, and S.J. Arnold. Evolution of breeding date and sexual selection in monogamous birds. Science 240: 798-799.

1988c. Lande, R., and M. Kirkpatrick. Ecological speciation by sexual selection. Journal of Theoretical Biology 133: 85-98.

1988d. Kirkpatrick, M. Consistency in genetic models of the sexy son: reply to Curtsinger and Heisler. American Naturalist 132: 609-610.

1988e. Kirkpatrick, M. The evolution of size in size-structured populations. Pages 13-28 in B. Ebenman and L. Persson (eds.), The Dynamics of Size-Structured Populations. Springer-Verlag, Heidelberg.

1989a. Kirkpatrick, M. Sexual selection: Is bigger always better? (News & Views commentary.) Nature 337: 116-117.

1989b. Kirkpatrick, M., and R. Lande. The evolution of maternal characters. Evolution 43: 485-503. Errata: Evolution 46: 284.

1989c. Kirkpatrick, M., and C.D. Jenkins. Genetic segregation and the maintenance of sexual reproduction. Nature 339: 300-301. Replies to Hedrick and Whittam, and Dunbrack. Nature 342: 232.

1989d. Kirkpatrick, M., and N. Heckman. A quantitative-genetic model for growth, shape, reaction norms, and other infinite-dimensional characters. Journal of Mathematical Biology 27: 429-450.

1989e. Kirkpatrick, M., and D. Lofsvold. The evolution of growth trajectories and other complex quantitative characters. Genome 31: 778-783.

1990a. Kirkpatrick, M., T. Price, and S.J. Arnold. The Darwin-Fisher theory of sexual selection in monogamous birds. Evolution 44: 180-193.

1990b. Kirkpatrick, M., D. Lofsvold, and M. Bulmer. Analysis of the inheritance, selection, and evolution of growth trajectories. Genetics 124: 979-993.

1990c. Lande, R., and M. Kirkpatrick. Selection response in traits with maternal inheritance. Genetical Research 55: 189-197.

1991a. Kirkpatrick, M., and M.J. Ryan. The evolution of mating preferences and the paradox of the lek. Nature 350: 33-38.

1991b. Willis, J., J. Coyne, and M. Kirkpatrick. Can one predict the evolution of quantitative characters without genetics? Evolution 45: 441-444.

1992a. Kirkpatrick, M. Direct selection of female mating preferences: comments on Grafen's models. Journal of Theoretical Biology 154: 127-129.

1992b. Gomulkiewicz, R., and M. Kirkpatrick. Quantitative genetics and the evolution of reaction norms. Evolution 46: 390-411.

1992c. Kirkpatrick, M. Avian affairs. (Review of T.R. Birkhead and A.P. Mø ller, Sperm Competition in Birds: Evolutionary Causes and Consequences. Academic Press, London.) Nature 357: 30.

1992d. Kirkpatrick, M., and D. Lofsvold. Measuring selection and constraint in the evolution of growth. Evolution 46: 954-971.

1993a. Kirkpatrick, M. Evolution of size and growth in fisheries and other harvested natural populations. Pages 145-154 in K. Stokes, J.M. McGlade, and R. Law (eds.), The Exploitation of Evolving Resources. Lecture Notes in Biomathematics 99. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.

1993b. Kirkpatrick, M., and M. Slatkin. Searching for evolutionary patterns in the shape of a phylogenetic tree. Evolution 47: 1171-1181.

1994a. Kirkpatrick, M. (ed.) The Evolution of Haploid-Diploid Life Cycles. Lectures on Mathematics in the Life Sciences 25, American Mathematical Society, Providence. 134 pp.

1994b. Jenkins, C.D., and M. Kirkpatrick. Deleterious mutation and ecological selection in the evolution of life cycles. Pages 53-68 in M. Kirkpatrick (ed.), The Evolution of Haploid-Diploid Life Cycles. Lectures on Mathematics in the Life Sciences 25, American Mathematical Society, Providence.

1994c. Kirkpatrick, M., and L.A. Dugatkin. Sexual selection and the effects of copying mate choice. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 34: 443-450.

1994d. Kirkpatrick, M. A field guide to quantitative genetics. (Review of C.R.B. Boake, Quantitative Genetics Studies of Behavioral Evolution. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.) Trends in Ecology and Evolution 9: 406.

1994e. Kirkpatrick, M., W.G. Hill, and R. Thompson. Estimating the covariance structure of traits during growth and aging, illustrated with lactation in dairy cattle. Genetical Research 64: 57-69.

1994f. Ryan, M., and M. Kirkpatrick. Sexual selection. Discovery 13: 29-33.

1994g. Kirkpatrick, M., and G.G. Rosenthal. Animal behaviour: Symmetry without fear. (News & Views commentary.) Nature 372: 134-135.

1995a. Kirkpatrick, M. Review of M. Andersson, Sexual Selection. Princeton University Press, Princeton. Quarterly Review of Biology 70: 77-78.

1995b. Jenkins, C.D., and M. Kirkpatrick. Deleterious mutation and the evolution of genetic life cycles. Evolution 49: 512-520.

1995c. Kirkpatrick, M., and N. Barton. Sexual selection: Déjà vu all over again. (News & Views commentary.) Nature 377: 388-389.

1995d. Kirkpatrick, M. Population Genetics, Molecular Evolution, and the Neutral Theory: Selected Papers of Motoo Kimura. Edited by N. Takahata. (Book review.) Genetical Research 66: 179-180.

1996a. Huelsenbeck, J.P., and M. Kirkpatrick. Do phylogenetic methods produce trees with biased shapes? Evolution 50: 1418-1424.

1996b. Kirkpatrick, M. Genes and adaptation: a pocket guide to the theory. Pages 125-146 in M.R. Rose and G.V. Lauder (eds.), Evolutionary Biology of Adaptation. Academic Press, Orlando.

1996c. Servedio, M.R, and M. Kirkpatrick. Mate choice copying can evolve without a cost to choice. American Naturalist 148: 848-867.

1996d. Kirkpatrick, M. Good genes and direct selection in the evolution of mating preferences. Evolution 50: 2125-2140.

1997a. Kirkpatrick, M., and N.H. Barton. Evolution of mating preferences for male genetic quality. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 94: 1282-1286.

1997b. Garcia-Ramos, G., and M. Kirkpatrick. Genetic models of rapid evolutionary divergence in peripheral populations. Evolution 51: 21-28.

1997c. Kirkpatrick, M., and N.H. Barton. Evolution of a species’ range. American Naturalist 150: 1-23.

1997d. Kirkpatrick, M. Genetic improvement of livestock growth using infinite-dimensional analysis. Animal Biotechnology 8: 55-62.

1997e. Servedio, M.R., and M. Kirkpatrick. The effects of gene flow on reinforcement. Evolution 51: 1764-1772.

1998a. Kirkpatrick, M., and M. Servedio. The reinforcement of mating preferences on an island. Genetics 151: 865-884.

1999a. Bataillon, T., and M. Kirkpatrick. Inbreeding depression due to mildly deleterious mutations in finite populations: size does matter. Genetical Research (in press).

1999b. Kirkpatrick, M. and T. Bataillon.  Artificial selection on phenotypically plastic traits.  Genetical Research 74: 265-270.

2000a. Kirkpatrick, M., and P. Jarne.  The effects of a bottleneck on inbreeding depression and the genetic load. American Naturalist 155: 154-167.

2000b. Bataillon, T., and M. Kirkpatrick.  Inbreeding depression due to mildly  deleterious mutations in finite populations: size does matter.  Genetical Research 75: 75-82.

2000c. Kirkpatrick, M.  Reinforcement and divergence under assortative mating.  Proc. Royal Soc. London B 267: 1649-1655.

2000d. Hall, D.W., M. Kirkpatrick, and B. West.  Runaway sexual selection when female preferences are directly selected.  Evolution (in press).

2000e. Kirkpatrick, M.  Reinforcement during ecological speciation.  Submitted.

2000f. Kirkpatrick, M., and V. Ravigne.  Speciation by natural and sexual selection.  Submitted.

2000g. Ronce, O., and M. Kirkpatrick.  When sources become sinks: migrational meltdown in heterogeneous habitats. Submitted.