Karin Pfennig

Karin Pfennig

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

H-index: 27

North America-United States

About Karin Pfennig

Karin Pfennig, With an exceptional h-index of 27 and a recent h-index of 22 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, specializes in the field of Speciation, Hybridization, Mate Choice, Sexual Selection.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

A maladaptive parental effect: offspring survival decreases with maternal over-condition in an amphibian

Climate change alters sexual signaling in a desert-adapted frog

Male toads change their aggregation behaviour when hybridization is favoured

Females alter their mate preferences depending on hybridization risk

A condition-dependent male sexual signal predicts adaptive predator-induced plasticity in offspring

Female mate preferences do not predict male sexual signals across populations

Biased hybridization and its impact on adaptive introgression

Adaptive plasticity as a fitness benefit of mate choice

Karin Pfennig Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

5862

Citations(since 2020)

2606

Cited By

4412

hIndex(all)

27

hIndex(since 2020)

22

i10Index(all)

43

i10Index(since 2020)

32

Email

University Profile Page

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Karin Pfennig Skills & Research Interests

Speciation

Hybridization

Mate Choice

Sexual Selection

Top articles of Karin Pfennig

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

A maladaptive parental effect: offspring survival decreases with maternal over-condition in an amphibian

Biological Journal of the Linnean Society

Emily A Harmon

Tianxiu Li

Patrick W Kelly

Catherine Chen

David W Pfennig

...

2023/12/1

Climate change alters sexual signaling in a desert-adapted frog

The American Naturalist

Gina M Calabrese

Karin S Pfennig

2023/1/1

Male toads change their aggregation behaviour when hybridization is favoured

Animal Behaviour

Catherine Chen

Courtney C Byrd

Karin S Pfennig

2022/8/1

Females alter their mate preferences depending on hybridization risk

Biology Letters

Gina M Calabrese

Karin S Pfennig

2022/11/16

A condition-dependent male sexual signal predicts adaptive predator-induced plasticity in offspring

Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology

Patrick W Kelly

David W Pfennig

Karin S Pfennig

2021/2

Female mate preferences do not predict male sexual signals across populations

Behavioral Ecology

Gina M Calabrese

Karin S Pfennig

2021/11/1

Biased hybridization and its impact on adaptive introgression

Karin S Pfennig

2021/6/1

Adaptive plasticity as a fitness benefit of mate choice

Patrick W Kelly

David W Pfennig

Karin S Pfennig

2021/4/1

Comparing Adaptive Radiations Across Space, Time, and Taxa.

Journal of Heredity

Christine Parent

Austin Patton

Karin Pfennig

Daniel Rubinoff

Dolph Schluter

...

2020/2/5

Reinforcement and the proliferation of species

Journal of Heredity

Gina M Calabrese

Karin S Pfennig

2020/1

Response to Comment on “Female toads engaging in adaptive hybridization prefer high-quality heterospecifics as mates”

Science

Catherine Chen

Karin S Pfennig

2020/10/9

Character displacement

Current Biology

David W Pfennig

Karin S Pfennig

2020/9/21

Differential encoding of signals and preferences by noradrenaline in the anuran brain

Journal of Experimental Biology

Sabrina S Burmeister

Verónica G Rodriguez Moncalvo

Karin S Pfennig

2020/9/15

Female toads engaging in adaptive hybridization prefer high-quality heterospecifics as mates

Science

Catherine Chen

Karin S Pfennig

2020/3/20

See List of Professors in Karin Pfennig University(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)

Co-Authors

H-index: 65
David W. Pfennig

David W. Pfennig

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

H-index: 30
William Harcombe

William Harcombe

University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

H-index: 22
Amber M. Rice

Amber M. Rice

Lehigh University

H-index: 7
George Harper

George Harper

Hendrix College

academic-engine