Aimee Sue Dunlap

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
asdunlap@email.arizona.edu
Ph: (520) 626-5565
Fax: (520) 621-2590
Mailing address: P.O. Box 210088, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721-0088

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Curriculum Vitae (pdf)
Research Interests
Publications

PUBLICATIONS

Dunlap, A.S. and Stephens, D.W. (in press). Components of change in the evolution of learning and unlearned preference. Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Dunlap, A.S., McLinn, C.M., MacCormick, H., Scott, M. and Kerr, B. (in press). Why some memories do not last a lifetime: optimal long-term recall in changing environments. Behavioral Ecology.

Stephens, D.W. and Dunlap, A.S. 2009. Why do animals make better choices in patch-leaving problems? Behavioral Processes. 80:252-260.

Stephens, D.W. and Dunlap, A.S. 2008. Foraging. In: Learning and Memory: A Comprehensive Reference. Byrne, J, Menzel, R. et al. (Eds.), Oxford: Elsevier Ltd. pp 365-383.

Henly, S., Ostdiek, A., Blackwell, E., Knutie, S., Dunlap, A.S. and Stephens, D.W. 2008. The discounting-by-interruptions hypothesis: model and experiment. Behavioral Ecology. 19:154-162.

Dunlap, A.S., Chen, B., Bednekoff, P., Greene, T., and Balda, R.P. 2006. A state dependent sex difference in spatial memory in pinyon jays (Gymnorhinus cyanocephalus): mated females forget as predicted by natural history. Animal Behaviour. 72: 401-411.

Mech, S.G., Dunlap, A.S., and Wolff, J.O. 2003. Female prairie voles do not choose males based on their frequency of scent marking. Behavioral Processes. 61: 101-108.

Wolff, J.O., Mech, S.G., Dunlap, A.S., and Hodges, K.E. 2002. Multi-male mating by paired and unparied female prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster). Behaviour. 139: 1147-1160.

Wolff, J.O. and Dunlap, A.S. 2002. Multiple male mating, probability of conception, and litter size in the prairie vole (Microtus ochrogaster). Behavioral Processes. 58: 105-110.

Wolff, J.O., Dunlap, A.S., and Ritchart, E. 2001. Female prairie voles and meadow voles do not suppress reproduction in their daughters. Behavioral Processes. 55: 157-162.