2022

140. Hunter AH, Smith NMA, Camata TV, Crowther MS, Mather A, Moura FA, Santiago PR and Wilson RS. 2022. Are soccer players born later in the year more technically skilled than those born earlier in the year. International Journal of Sports Science & Coaching, https://doi.org/10.1177/17479541221117630

139. Hunter AH, Smith NMA, Camata TV, Crowther MS, Mather A, Souza NM, Ramos-Silva LF, Pazetto NF, Moura FA and Wilson RS. 2021. Age-and size-corrected kicking speed and accuracy in elite junior soccer players. Science and Medicine in Football, DOI: 10.1080/24733938.2021.1899274

138. Lailvaux SP, Mishra A, Pun P, Kabir MWU, Wilson RS, Herrel A and Hoque MT. 2022. Machine learning accurately predicts the multivariate performance phenotype from morphology in lizards. Plos one, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0261613

137. Hunter AH, Pavlic TP, Angilletta MJ and Wilson RS. 2022. Identifying the best strategy for soccer penalty success: A predictive model for optimising behavioral and biomechanical trade-offs. J Biomechanics 141: 111208. Read here.

2021

136. Thomas H, Cameron SF, Campbell HA, Micheli-Campbell MA, Kirke EC, Wheatley R and Wilson RS. 2021. Rocky escarpment versus savanna woodlands: comparing diet and body condition as indicators of habitat quality for the endangered northern quoll (Dasyurus hallucatus). Wildlife Research, https://doi.org/10.1071/WR20032

135. Wilson RS, Hunter AH, Camata TV, Foster CSP, Sparkes GR, Moura FA, Santiago PRP and Smith NMA. 2021. Simple and reliable protocol for identifying talented junior players in team sports using small‐sided games. Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports, DOI: 10.1111/sms.13969

2020

134. Viacava P, Blomberg SP, Sansalone G, Phillips MJ, Guillerme T, Cameron SF, Wilson RS and Weisbecker V. 2020. Skull shape of a widely distributed, endangered marsupial reveals little evidence of local adaptation between fragmented populations. Ecology and Evolution, 10:9707–9720.

133. Wheatley R, Pavlic TP, Levy O and Wilson RS. 2020. Habitat features and performance interact to determine the outcomes of terrestrial predator–prey pursuits. Journal of Animal Ecology, DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13353

132. Wilson RS,  Pavlic TP, Wheatley R,  Niehaus AC and Levy O. 2020. Modeling escape success in terrestrial predator–prey interactions. Integrative and Comparative Biology, icaa070, DOI: 0.1093/icb/icaa070

131. Wilson RS, Smith NMA, de Souza NM and Moura FA. 2020. Dribbling speed predicts goal‐scoring success in a soccer training game. The Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sport. DOI: 10.1111/sms.13782

130. Rew-Duffy M, Cameron SF, Freeman NJ, Wheatley R, Latimer JM and Wilson RS. 2020. Greater agility increases probability of survival in the endangered northern quoll. Journal of Experimental Biology DOI: 10.1242/jeb.218503

129. Wilson RS, Smith NMA, Bedo BLS, Aquino R, Moura FA and Santiago PRP. 2020. Technical skill not athleticism predicts an individual’s ability to maintain possession in small-sided soccer games. Science and Medicine in Football. DOI: 10.1080/24733938.2020.1780468

128. Aquino R, Carling C, Maia J, Vieira LHP, Wilson RS, Smith NMA, Almeida R, Gonçalves LGC, Kalva Filho CA, Garganta J and Puggina EF. 2020. Relationships between running demands in soccer match-play, anthropometric, and physical fitness characteristics: A systematic review. International Journal of Performance Analysis in Sport, 20(3): 534-555, DOI: 10.1080/24748668.2020.1746555

127. Da Silva CRB, van den Berg CP, Condon ND, Riginois C, Wilson RS and Cheney KL. 2020. Intertidal gobies acclimate rate of luminance change for background matching with shifts in seasonal temperature. Journal of Animal Ecology, 89(7): 1735-1746. DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13226

126. Heiniger J, Cameron S, Madsen T, Niehaus AC and Wilson RS. 2020. Demography and spatial requirements of the endangered northern quoll on Groote Eylandt. Wildlife Research, 47(3): 224-238 DOI: 10.1071/WR19052 

125. Wilson RS, de Souza APS, Santiago PRP, Ignacio DL and Smith NMA. 2020. Individual performance in passing tests predicts age‐independent success in small‐sided soccer possession games. Translational Sports Medicine, 3(4): 353-363 DOI: 10.1002/tsm2.142

2019

124. Wilson RS, Ramos SD, Caetano FG, Rinaldo MA, Santiago PRP, Cunha SA and Moura FA. 2019. Dribbling speed along curved paths predicts attacking performance in match-realistic one vs. one soccer games. Journal of Sport Science, 37(9): 1072-1079 Link to paper

123. da Silva CRB, Wilson RS and Riginos C. 2019. Rapid larval growth is costly for post-metamorphic thermal performance in a Great Barrier Reef fish. Coral Reefs, 1-13 Link to paper

122. da Silva CRB, Riginos C and Wilson RS. 2019. An intertidal fish shows thermal acclimation despite living in a rapidly fluctuating environment. Journal of Comparative Physiology B, doi.org/10.1007/s00360-019-01212-0 Link to paper

121. Clemente CJ, Dick TJM, Wheatley R, Gaschk J, Amir Abdul Nasir AF, Cameron SF and Wilson RS. 2019. Moving in complex environments: a biomechanical analysis of locomotion on inclined and narrow substrates. Journal of Experimental Biology, doi: 10.1242/jeb.189654 Link to paper 

2018

120. Wilson RS, Smith NMA, Santiago PRP, Camata T, Ramos SD, Caetano FG, Cunha SA, de Souza APS and Moura FA. 2018. Predicting the defensive performance of individual players in one vs. one soccer games. Plos One, 13(12) Link to paper

119. Hunter AH, Angilletta MJ Jr and Wilson RS. 2018. Behaviors of shooter and goalkeeper interact to determine the outcome of soccer penalties. Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports, 28(12): 2751-2759 Link to paper

118. Hunter AH, Murphy SC, Angilletta MJ Jr and Wilson RS. 2018. Anticipating the direction of soccer penalty shots depends on the speed and technique of the kick. Sports, 6(73). doi:10.3390/sports6030073 Link to paper

117. Amir Abdul Nasir AF, Cameron SF , Niehaus AC, Clemente CJ, von Hippel FA and Wilson RS. 2018. Manganese contamination affects the motor performance of wild northern quolls (Dasyurus hallucatus). Environmental Pollution, 242: 55-62. doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2018.03.087 Link to paper

116. Wheatley R, Clemente CJ, Niehaus AC, Fisher DO and Wilson RS. 2018. Surface friction alters the agility of a small Australian marsupial. Journal of Experimental Biology, 221: 1-8. doi: 10.1242/jeb.172544 Link to paper

115. Charters JE, Heiniger J, Clemente CJ, Cameron SF, Amir Abdul Nasir AF, Niehaus AC and Wilson RS. 2018. Multi-dimensional analyses of physical performance reveal a size dependent trade-off between suites of traits . Functional Ecology,  32: 1541-1553. doi:10.1111/1365-2435.13115 Link to paper

114. Hunter AH, Pavlic TP, Angilletta MJ and Wilson RS. 2018.  Modelling the two-dimensional accuracy of soccer kicks. Journal of Biomechanics, 72: 159-166. doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2018.03.003 Link to paper

113. Bishop PJ, Graham DF, Lamas LP, Hutchinson JR, Rubenson J, Hancock JA, Wilson RS, Hocknull SA, Barrett RS, Lloyd DG, Clemente C  2018. The influence of speed and size on avian terrestrial locomotor biomechanics: predicting locomotion in extinct theropod dinosaurs.  PLoS One, doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0192172  Link to paper

112. Cameron SF, Wheatley R and Wilson RS. 2018. Sex-specific thermal sensitivities of performance and activity in the Asian house gecko, Hemidactylus frenatus. Journal of Comparative Physiology B, 188: 635-647. doi.org/10.1007/s00360-018-1149-2 Link to paper

111. Wheatley R, Niehaus AC, Fisher DO & Wilson RS. 2018. Ecological context and the probability of mistakes underlie speed choice. Functional Ecology, 32: 990-1000. doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.13036 Link to paper

2017

110. Wilson RS, David GK, Murphy SC, Angilletta MJ Jr, Niehaus AC, Hunter AH and Smith MD. 2017. Skill not athleticism predicts individual variation in match performance of soccer players. Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 284  Link to paper

109. Niehaus  AC and Wilson RS. 2017. Integrating conservation biology into the development of automated vehicle technology to reduce animal-vehicle collisions. Conservation Letters, doi:10.1111/conl.12427 Link to paper

108. Amir Abdul Nasir AF, Cameron SF , von Hippel FA, Postlethwait J, Niehaus AC, Blomberg S and Wilson RS. 2017. Manganese accumulates in the brain of northern quolls (Dasyurus hallucatus) living near an active mine. Environmental pollution, 233: 377-386. doi:10.1016/j.envpol.2017.10.088

107. Careau V and Wilson RS. 2017. Of Uberfleas and Krakens: detecting trade-offs using mixed models. Integrative and Comparative Biology, in press.

106. Careau V and Wilson RS. 2017. Performance trade-offs and ageing in the “world’s greatest athletes”. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B - Biological Sciences,  284(1868): 1-9.  doi:10.1098/rspb.2017.1048

105. Bishop PJ, Clemente CJ, Weems RE, Graham DF, Lamas LP, Hutchinson JR, Rubenson J, Wilson RS, Hocknull SA, Barrett RS and Lloyd DG. 2017. Using step width to compare locomotor biomechanics between extinct, non-avian theropod dinosaurs and modern obligate bipeds. Journal of Royal Society Interface, 14(132). doi:10.1098/rsif.2017.0276

104.  Amir Abdul Nasir AF, Clemente C, Wynn M and Wilson RS. 2017. Optimal running speeds when there is a trade-off between speed and the probability of mistakes. Functional Ecology, 31: 1941–1949. doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.12902 Link to paper

103. Heiniger J, van Uitregt VO, Bywater CL and Wilson RS. 2017. Fine tuning anti-predator responses: are the costs of inducible predator defences proportional to the magnitude of the responses? Austral Ecology, in press. 

2016

102. Ellis WA, FitzGibbon SI, Barth B, Niehaus AC, David GK, Taylor BD, Matsushige H, Melzer A, Bercovitch F, Carrick F, Jones DN, Dexter C, Gillett A, Predavec M, Lunney D and Wilson RS. 2016. Daylight savings time can decrease the frequency of wildlife-vehicle collisions. Biology Letters, doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2016.0632

101. Bonneaud C, Wilson RS and Seebacher F. 2016. Immune-challenged fish up-regulate their metabolic scope to support locomotion. PLoS ONE, 11. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0166028

100. Jessop TS, Lane ML, Teasdale L, Stuart-Fox D, Wilson RS, Careau V and Moore IT. 2016. Multiscale evaluation of thermal dependence in the glucocorticoid response of vertebrates. American Naturalist, 188: 342–356.  doi:10.1086/687588

99. von Hippel W, Baker E, Wilson RS, Brin L and Page L. 2016. Detecting deceptive behaviour after the fact. British Journal of Social Psychology, 55: 195–205.  doi:10.1111/bjso.12129

98. Wilson RS, James RS, David G, Hermann E, Morgan OJ, Niehaus AC, Hunter AH and Smith, M. 2016. Multivariate analyses of individual variation in soccer skill as a tool for talent identification and development: utilizing evolutionary theory in sports science. Journal of Sports Sciences, doi: 10.1080/02640414.2016.1151544.

97. van Uitregt VO, Alton LA, Heiniger J and Wilson RS. 2016. Warmer temperatures reduce the costs of inducible defences in the marine toad, Rhinella marinus. Journal of Comparative Physiology B, 186: 123-130. doi:10.1007/s00360-015-0938-0

96. Clemente CJ and Wilson RS. 2016. Speed and maneuverability jointly determine escape success: exploring the functional bases of escape performance using simulated games. Behavioral Ecology271: 45-54. doi:10.1093/beheco/arv080

2015

95. David GK and Wilson RS. 2015. Cooperation improves success during intergroup competition: an analysis using data from professional soccer tournaments. PLoS One, 10(8): e0136503. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0136503

94. Wilson RS and Husak JF. 2015. Introduction to the symposium: towards a general framework for predicting animal movement speeds in nature. Integrative and Comparative Biology, 5 (6): 1121-1124. doi: 10.1093/icb/icv107

93. Clemente CJ and Wilson RS. 2015. Balancing biomechanical constraints: optimal escape speeds when there is a trade-off between speed and manoeuvrability. Integrative and Comparative Biology,  55(6): 1142-1154 doi:10.1093/icb/icv103

92. Bywater CL, Seebacher F and Wilson RS. 2015. Building a dishonest signal: the functional basis of unreliable signals of strength in males of the two-toned fiddler crab, Uca vomerisJournal of Experimental Biology, 218: 3077-3082; doi: 10.1242/jeb.120857

91. Wilson RS, Husak JF, Halsey L and Clemente CJ. 2015. Predicting the movement speeds of animals in natural environments. Integrative and Comparative Biology, 55(6): 1125-1141 doi:10.1093/icb/icv106

90. Niehaus AC and Wilson RS. 2015. Can cheating crustaceans teach us anything about the origins of deception? in Lying: The making of Our World (eds: Mallot E).

89. Wheatley R, Angilletta MJ, Niehaus AC and Wilson RS. 2015. How fast should an animal run when escaping? An optimality model based on the trade-off between speed and accuracy. Integrative and Comparative Biology, doi: 10.1093/icb/icv091.

88. Clemente C and Wilson RS. 2015. Speed and maneuverability jointly determine escape success during simulated games of escape behaviour. Behavioural Ecology, doi: 10.1093/beheco/arv080

87. Murphy SC, von Hippel W, Dubbs SL, Angilletta Jr MJ, Wilson RS, Trivers R and Barlow FK. 2015. The role of overconfidence in romantic desirability and competition. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 41: 1036-1052.

86. Wynn ML, Clemente C, Amir Abdul Nasir AF and Wilson RS. 2015. Running faster causes disaster: trade-offs between speed, manoeuvrability and motor control when running around corners in northern quolls (Dasyurus hallucatus). Journal of Experimental Biology, 218: 433-439.

85. Barth B, FitzGibbon S and Wilson RS. 2015. New urban developments that retain more remnant trees have greater bird diversity. Landscape and Urban Planning, 136: 122-129.

2014

84. Bywater CL, White CR and Wilson RS. 2014. Metabolic incentives for dishonest signals of strength in the fiddler crab Uca vomeris. Journal of Experimental Biology, 217: 2848-2850; doi: 10.1242/jeb.099390

83. Kuchel LJ, Stevens SK, Wilson RS and Cokley J. 2014. A documentary video assignment to enhance learning in large first-year science classes. International Journal of Innovation in Science and Mathematics Education, 22: 48-64.

82. Wilson RS and Angilletta MJ. 2014. Dishonest signals of strength in Animal Signalling: a Functional Perspective (eds: Irschick DJ, Briffa M and Podos J). Ralph Wiley Press.

81. Lailvaux S, Wilson RS and Kasumovic M. 2014. Trait compensation and sex-specific aging of performance in male and female professional basketball players. Evolution, 68(5): 1523-1532.

80. Latimer C, McGuigan K, Blows M, Wilson RS and Chenoweth S. 2014. The contribution of spontaneous mutations to thermal sensitivity curve variation in Drosophila serrata. Evolution, 68(6): 1824-37.

79. McElroy E, Wilson RS, Biknevisius A and Reilly S. 2014. A comparative study of single leg ground reaction forces in running lizards. Journal of Experimental Biology, 217: 735-742.

78. Wilson RS, Niehaus AC, David G, Hunter AH and Smith M. 2014. Individual quality masks the detection of performance trade-offs: a test using analyses of human physical performance. Journal of Experimental Biology, 217: 545-55.

2013

77. Cameron SF, Wynn ML and Wilson RS. 2013. Sex-specific trade-offs and compensatory mechanisms: bite force and sprint speed pose conflicting demands on the design of geckos (Hemidactylus frenatus). Journal of Experimental Biology, 216: 3781-3789.

76. Trappett A and Wilson RS. 2013. Extravagant ornaments of male threadfin rainbowfish (Iriatherina werneri) are not costly for swimming. Functional Ecology, 27(4): 1034-1041.

75.  Prates I, Angilletta MJ, Wilson RS, Niehaus AC and Navas CA. 2013. Dehydration hardly slows hopping toads (Rhinella granulosa) from xeric and mesic environments. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, 86(4): 451-457. 

74. Seebacher F, Ward JW and Wilson RS. 2013. Increased aggression during pregnancy comes at a higher metabolic cost. Journal of Experimental Biology, 216: 771-776.

73. Ellis W, FitzGibbon S, Melzer A, Wilson RS, Johnston S, Bercovitch F, Dique D and Carrick F. 2013. Koala habitat use and population density: using field data to test the assumptions of ecological models. Australian Mammology, 35(2): 160-165.

72. van Uitregt VO, Hurst T and Wilson RS. 2013. Greater costs of inducible behavioural defences at cooler temperatures in larvae of the mosquito Aedes notoscriptus. Evolutionary Ecology, 27: 13-26

2012

71. Hancox D, Wilson RS and White CR. 2012. Visual habitat geometry predicts relative morph abundance in the colour-polymorphic ornate rainbowfish. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B, 280: 2012-2377.

70. Seebacher F, Holmes S, Roosen N, Nouvian M, Wilson RS and Ward A. 2012. Capacity for thermal acclimation differs between populations and phylogenetic lineages within a species. Functional Ecology, 26(6): 1418-1428.

69. Angilletta MJ and Wilson RS. 2012. Cryptic asymmetry: unreliable signals mask asymmetric performance of crayfish weapons. Biology Letters, 8: 551-553.

68. Ferris R and Wilson RS. 2012. The physiological arms race: exploring thermal acclimation among interacting species. Journal of Thermal Biology, 37(3): 236-242.

67. Niehaus AC, Wilson RS, Storm JJ and Angilletta MJ. 2012. Fall field crickets did not acclimate to simulated seasonal changes in temperature. Journal of Comparative Physiology B, 182(2): 199-207.

66. Bywater C and Wilson RS. 2012. Is honesty the best policy? Testing signal reliability in fiddler crabs when receiver-dependent costs are high. Functional Ecology, 26(4): 804-811.

65. Adriaenssens B, Van Damme R, Seebacher F and Wilson RS. 2012. Sex cells in changing environments: can organisms adjust the physiological function of gametes to different temperatures? Global Change Biology, 18(6): 1797-1803.

64. Niehaus AC, Angilletta MJ, Sears M, Franklin CE and Wilson RS. 2012. Predicting the physiological performance of ectotherms in fluctuating thermal environments. Journal of Experimental Biology, 215: 694-701.

63. David GK, Condon CK, Bywater CL, Ortiz-Barrientos D and Wilson RS. 2012. Receivers limit the prevalence of deception in humans: evidence from diving behaviour in soccer players. PLoS One, 6(10): e26017.

62. Alton LA, White CR, Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 2012. The energetic cost of exposure to UV radiation is greater for tadpoles when they live with predators. Functional Ecology, 26(1): 94-103.

2011

61. Walter G, van Uitregt VO and Wilson RS. 2011. Social control of unreliable signals of strength in males but not females of the crayfish Cherax destructor. Journal of Experimental Biology, 214: 3294-3299.

60. van Uitregt VO, Hurst T and Wilson RS. 2011. Reduced size and starvation resistance in adult mosquitoes Aedes notoscriptus. Journal of Animal Ecology, 81(1): 108-115.

59. Latimer CA, Wilson RS and Chenoweth SF. 2011. Quantitative genetic variation for thermal performance curves within and among natural populations of Drosophila serrata. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 24: 965-975.

58. Niehaus AC, Wilson RS, Seebacher F and Franklin CE. 2011. Striped marsh frog (Limnodynastes peronii) tadpoles do not acclimate metabolic performance to thermal variability. Journal of Experimental Biology, 214: 1965-1970.

57. Ellis W, Bercovitch F, FitzGibbon SI, Roe P, Wimmer J, Melzer A and Wilson RS. 2011. Koala bellows and their association with the spatial dynamics of free ranging koalas. Behavioural Ecology, 22(2): 372-377.

56. FitzGibbon SI, Wilson RS and Goldizen A. 2011. The behavioural ecology and population dynamics of a cryptic ground-dwelling mammal in an urban Australian landscape. Austral Ecology, 36(6): 722-732. View abstract here.

55. Alton LA,  Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 2011. A small increase in UV-B increases the susceptibility of tadpoles to predation. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B, 278: 2575-2583. View abstract here.

2010

54. Wilson RS, Lefrancois C, Domenici P and Johnston IA. 2010. Environmental influences on unsteady swimming behaviour: consequences for predator-prey and mating encounters in teleosts In Fish Locomotion: An eco-ethological perspective (eds: Domenici P and Kapoor BG). Science Publishers, NH, USA

53. Wilson RS, Condon CH, David G, FitzGibbon SI, Niehaus AC and Pratt K. 2010. Females prefer athletes, males fear the disadvantaged: different signals used in female choice and male competition have varied consequences. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B, 277: 1923-1928. View abstract here.

52. Condon CH, Chenoweth SF and Wilson RS. 2010. Zebrafish take their cue from temperature but not photoperiod for the seasonal plasticity of thermal performance. Journal of Experimental Biology, 213: 3705-3709. View abstract here.

51. Hancox D, Hoskins C and Wilson RS. 2010. Evening up the score: sexual selection favours both alternatives in the colour-polymorphic ornate rainbowfish. Animal Behaviour, 80: 845-851. View abstract here.

50. Barth B and Wilson RS. 2010. Life in acid: interactive effects of pH and natural organic acids on growth, development and locomotor performance of larval striped marsh frogs (Limnodynastes peronii). Journal of Experimental Biology, 213: 1293-1300. View full text here.

49. Lowe K, FitzGibbon SI, Seebacher F and Wilson RS. 2010. Physiological and behavioural responses to seasonal changes in environmental temperature in the Australian spiny crayfish Euastacus sulcatusJournal of Comparative Physiology B, 180: 653-660. View abstract here.

48. Bowndes C, Wilson RS and Marshall DJ. 2010. Why do colder mothers produce larger eggs? An optimality model. Journal of Experimental Biology, 213: 3796-3801. View abstract here.

47. Alton LA, Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 2010. Risk of predation enhances the lethal effects of UV-B in amphibians. Global Change Biology, 16: 538-545. View abstract here.

2009

46. Wilson RS, James RS, Bywater C and Seebacher F. 2009. Costs and benefits of increased weapon size differ between sexes of the slender crayfish, Cherax disparJournal of Experimental Biology, 212: 853-858. View abstract here.

45. Schimpf NG, Matthews PGD, Wilson RS and White CR. 2009. Cockroaches breathe discontinuously to reduce respiratory water loss. Journal of Experimental Biology, 212: 2773-2780. View abstract here.

2008

44. Bywater C, Angilletta MJ and Wilson RS. 2008. Weapon size is a reliable predictor of weapon strength and social dominance in females of the slender crayfish. Functional Ecology, 22: 311-316. View abstract here.

43. Angilletta MJ, Wilson RS, Niehaus AC and Ribiero P. 2008. The fast and the fractalous: tradeoffs between running speed and manoeuvrability in leaf-cutter ants. Functional Ecology, 22: 78-83. View abstract here.

42. James RS and Wilson RS. 2008. Explosive jumping: morphological and physiological specialisations for extreme jumping in Australian rocket frogs. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, 81: 176-185. View abstract here.

2007

41. Seebacher F and Wilson RS. 2007. Individual recognition in crayfish (Cherax dispar): the roles of strength and experience in deciding aggressive encounters. Biology Letters, 3: 471-474. View abstract here.

40. Wilson RS, Hammill E and Johnston IA. 2007. Competition moderates the benefits of thermal acclimation to reproductive performance in male eastern mosquitofish. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B, 274: 1199-1204. View full text here.

39. Wilson RS, Angilletta MJ, James RS, Navas C and Seebacher F. 2007. Dishonest signals of strength in male slender crayfish (Cherax dispar) during agonistic interactions. The American Naturalist, 170: 284-291. View abstract here.

38. Angilletta MJ, Wilson RS, Niehaus A, Ribeiro PL and Navas CA. 2007. Urban physiology: city ants possess high heat tolerance. PLoS One, 2(2): e258. View full text here.

37. van Uitregt VO, Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 2007. Thermal sensitivity of UVb effects on embryonic and larval striped marsh frogs Limnodynastes peroniiGlobal Change Biology, 13: 2684-2697. View abstract here.

36. Wilson RS, Condon CHL and Johnston IA. 2007. Consequences of thermal acclimation for the mating behaviour and swimming performance of female mosquitofish. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 362: 2131-2139. View full text here.

2006

35. Johnston IA and Wilson RS. 2006. Temperature-induced developmental plasticity in ectotherms in Comparative Developmental Physiology (eds: Warburton SJ, Burggren WW, Pelster B, Reiber CL and Spicer J). Oxford University Press: New York, 124-138.

34. Kraft P, Wilson RS, Blows M and Franklin CE. 2006. Substantial changes in the genetic basis of tadpole morphology of Rana lessonae in the absence of predators. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 19: 1813-1818. View abstract here.

33. Carter A and Wilson RS. 2006. Improving sneaky-sex in a low oxygen environment:reproductive and physiological responses of male mosquito fish to chronic hypoxia. Journal of Experimental Biology, 209: 4878-4884. View full text here.

32. Seebacher F and Wilson RS. 2006. Fighting fit: thermal plasticity of metabolic function and fighting success in the crayfish Cherax destructorFunctional Ecology, 20: 1045-1053. View abstract here.

31. Niehaus A, Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 2006. Short- and long-term consequences of thermal variation in the larval environment of anurans. Journal of Animal Ecology, 75: 686-692. View abstract here.

30. Condon CHL and Wilson RS. 2006. Effect of thermal acclimation on female resistance to forced matings in the eastern mosquito fish. Animal Behaviour, 72: 585-593. View abstract here.

29. Angilletta MJ, Bennett AF, Guderley H, Navas CA, Seebacher F and Wilson RS. 2006. Coadaptation: a unifying principle in evolutionary thermal biology. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, 79: 282-593. View abstract here.

2005

28. Wilson RS. 2005. Temperature influences swimming and sneaky-mating performance of male mosquitofish Gambusia holbrookiAnimal Behaviour, 70: 1387-1394. 

27. Wilson RS. 2005 Consequences of metamorphosis for the locomotor performance and thermal physiology of the newt Triturus cristatusPhysiological and Biochemical Zoology, 78: 967-975. View abstract here.

26. Kraft P, Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 2005. Phenotypic plasticity as a defence strategy in tadpoles of Limnodynastes peronii: induction cues, costs and benefits. Austral Ecology, 30: 558-563.

25. Wilson RS, Kraft PG, Van Damme R. 2005. Predator-specific changes in morphology and swimming performance of anuran larvae. Functional Ecology, 19: 238-244.

24. James RS, Wilson RS, de Carvalho J, Kohlsdorf T, Gomes F and Navas CA. 2005. Structural basis of individual variation in jump performance of the frog Hyla multilineataPhysiological and Biochemical Zoology, 78: 857-867.

 23. Navas C, James RS and Wilson RS. 2005. Inter-individual variation in the muscle physiology of vertebrate ectotherms: consequences for behavioural and ecological performance in Ecology and Biomechanics:  A Mechanical Approach to the Ecology of Animals and Plants (eds: Herrel A, Speck T and Rowe NP). Taylor & Francis publishing, 231-251.

2004

22. Wilson RS and Johnston IA. 2004. Combining studies of comparative physiology and behavioural ecology to test the benefits of thermal acclimation. International Congress Series, 1275: 201-208.

21. Hammill E, Wilson RS and Johnston IA. 2004. Sustained swimming performance and muscle structure are altered by thermal acclimation in male mosquitofish. Journal of Thermal Biology, 29: 251-257.

20. Navas CA, Jared C, Carvalho JE, Chaui-Berlink JG, Dal Pai Silva M, Antoniazzi M, James RS, Wilson RS and Kohlsdorf T. 2004. Muscle morphological and physiological specialization for digging in the amphisbaenian Leposternon microcephalum (Squamata; Amphisbaenia). Journal of Experimental Biology, 207: 2433-2441.

19. Wilson RS, James RS, Kohlsdorf T and Cox VM. 2004. Inter-individual variation in isolated muscle performance and fiber-type composition in the toad Bufo viridusJournal of Comparative Physiology B, 174: 453-459.

18. Kohlsdorf T, James RS, Carvalho JE, Wilson RS, Pae-Silva MD and Navas CA. 2004. Locomotor performance of closely related Tropidurus species: relationships with physiological parameters and ecological divergence. Journal of Experimental Biology, 207: 1183-1192.

17. James RS, Wilson RS and Askew G. 2004. The effects of caffeine on power output during recovery from fatigue in isolated mouse EDL and soleus muscle. Journal of Applied Physiology, 96: 545-552.

16. Wilson RS and James RS. 2004. Constraints on muscular performance: trade-offs between power output and fatigue-resistance in skeletal muscle. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B, 271: S222-S225.

2003

15. Angilleta MJ, Wilson RS, Navas C and James RS. 2003. Evolution of thermal reaction norms. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 18: 234-240.

14. Franklin CE, Wilson RS and Davison W. 2003. Burst swimming performance of 5 species of Antarctic fish at –1°C. Journal of Thermal Biology, 28: 59-65.

2002

13. Van Damme R, Wilson RS, Van Hooydonck B and Aerts P. 2002. Performance constraints in decathletes. Nature, 415: 755-756. View abstract here.

12. Wilson RS, Kuchel L, Franklin CE and Davison W. 2002. Turning up the heat on subzero fish: thermal dependence of sustained swimming in an Antarctic notothenioid. Journal of Thermal Biology, 27: 381-386.

11. Wilson RS, James RS and Van Damme R. 2002.Trade-offs between speed and endurance in the frog Xenopus laevis: a multi-level approach. Journal of Experimental Biology, 205: 1145-1152. View full text here.

10. Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 2002. The detrimental acclimation hypothesis. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 17: 408. View abstract here.

9. Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 2002. Testing the beneficial acclimation hypothesis. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 17: 66-70. View abstract here.

2001

8. Wilson RS. 2001. Geographic variation in thermal sensitivity of jumping performance in the frog Limnodynastes peronii. Journal of Experimental Biology, 204: 4227-4236. View full text here.

7. Wilson RS, Franklin CE, Davison W and Kraft P. 2001. Stenotherms at sub-zero temperatures: thermal dependence of swimming performance in Antarctic fish. Journal of Comparative Physiology B, 171: 263-269. View abstract here.

2000 & beyond

6. Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 2000. Inability of adult Limnodynastes peronii (Amphibia : Anura) to thermally acclimate locomotor performance. Journal of Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A, 127: 21-28. View abstract here.

5. Wilson RS, James RS and Johnston IA. 2000. Thermal acclimation of locomotor performance in tadpoles and adults of the aquatic frog Xenopus laevisJournal of Comparative Physiology B, 170: 117-124. View abstract here.

4. Wilson RS, Franklin CE, James RS and Johnston IA. 2000. Allometric scaling relationships of jumping performance in the striped marsh frog Limnodynastes peroniiJournal of Experimental Biology, 203: 1937-1946. View abstract here.

3. Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 2000. Effect of ontogenetic increases in body size on burst swimming performance in tadpoles of the striped marsh frog Limnodynastes peroniiPhysiological and Biochemical Zoology, 73: 142152. View abstract here.

2. Wilson RS and Franklin CE. 1999. Thermal acclimation of locomotor performance in tadpoles of the frog Limnodynastes peronii. Journal of Comparative Physiology B, 169: 445-451. View abstract here.

1. Wilson RS and Booth DT. 1998. Effect of tail loss on reproductive output and its ecological significance in the skink Eulpamprus quoyiiJournal of Herpetology, 32: 128-131. View abstract here.