Female choice in a promiscuous wild guinea pig, the yellow-toothed cavy (Galea musteloides) Christa HohoffKerstin FranzenNorbert Sachser Original Article 27 February 2003 Pages: 341 - 349
Achromatic color variation in black-capped chickadees, Poecile atricapilla: black and white signals of sex and rank Daniel J. MennillStéphanie M. DoucetLaurene M. Ratcliffe Original Article 08 March 2003 Pages: 350 - 357
Parental care and mate attraction in the Florida flagfish, Jordanella floridae Katja BonnevierKai LindströmColette St. Mary Original Article 05 March 2003 Pages: 358 - 363
Prey dynamics affect foraging by a pelagic predator (Stenella longirostris) over a range of spatial and temporal scales Kelly J. Benoit-BirdWhitlow W. L. Au Original Article 12 March 2003 Pages: 364 - 373
Loud calls as indicators of dominance in male baboons (Papio cynocephalus ursinus) Dawn M. KitchenRobert M. SeyfarthDorothy L. Cheney Original Article 18 February 2003 Pages: 374 - 384
Oviposition site selection and oviposition stimulation by conspecifics in the golden egg bug (Phyllomorpha laciniata): implications for female fitness Francisco García-GonzálezMontserrat Gomendio Original Article 07 March 2003 Pages: 385 - 392
Carotenoid-based status signalling in red-shouldered widowbirds (Euplectes axillaris): epaulet size and redness affect captive and territorial competition Sarah R. PrykeStaffan Andersson Original Article 15 February 2003 Pages: 393 - 401
Modelling the influence of demographic parameters on group structure in social species with dispersal asymmetry and group fission D. LefebvreN. MénardJ. S. Pierre Original Article 22 February 2003 Pages: 402 - 410
The occurrence and context of tremble dancing in free-foraging honey bees (Apis mellifera) Jacobus Christiaan Biesmeijer Original Article 15 March 2003 Pages: 411 - 416
Consensus building during nest-site selection in honey bee swarms: the expiration of dissent Thomas D. Seeley Original Article 19 March 2003 Pages: 417 - 424
Countermarking by male pygmy lorises (Nycticebus pygmaeus): do females use odor cues to select mates with high competitive ability? Heidi S. Fisher R. Swaisgood H. Fitch-Snyder Erratum Pages: 425 - 426