Journal of Evolutionary Biology

Papers
(The H4-Index of Journal of Evolutionary Biology is 18. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-04-01 to 2025-04-01.)
ArticleCitations
Evolutionary coexistence in a fluctuating environment by specialization on resource level65
Consequences of adaptation to larval crowding on sexual and fecundity selection in Drosophila melanogaster65
A novel neo‐sex chromosome in Sylvietta brachyura (Macrosphenidae) adds to the extraordinary avian sex chromosome diversity among Sylvioidea songbirds53
Reproductive trade‐offs and phenotypic selection change with body condition, but not with predation regime, across island lizard populations53
Lack of alignment across yeast‐dependent life‐history traits may limit Drosophila melanogaster dietary specialization46
The evolution of the additive variance of a trait under stabilizing selection after autopolyploidization38
Mutation accumulation in inbreeding populations under evolution of the selfing rate35
33
33
25
20
19
Response to: A comment on The adaptive value of gluttony: Predators mediate the life history trade‐offs of satiation threshold by Pruitt and Krauel (2010) by Postma et al. (2021)19
Intraspecific variation in reproductive barriers between two closely related Arabidopsis sister species19
A variance partitioning perspective of assortative mating: Proximate mechanisms and evolutionary implications18
Evidence of prezygotic isolation, but not assortative mating, between locally adapted populations ofFundulus heteroclitusacross a salinity gradient18
Multispecies colour polymorphisms associated with contrasting microhabitats in two Mediterranean wrasse radiations18
Avoiding the tragedy of the commons: Improved group‐feeding performance in kin groups maintains foraging cooperation in subsocial Stegodyphus africanus spiders (Araneae, Eresidae)18
Sequencing of laser captured Z and W chromosomes of the tocantins paradoxical frog (Pseudis tocantins) provides insights on repeatome and chromosomal homology18
0.33110404014587