Animal Behaviour vol 154
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Accounting for pseudoreplication is not possible when the source of nonindependence is unknown; Assessing the effect of pseudoreplication when individual identities are unknown: a reply to Gratton & Mundry.
How social systems persist: learning to build a social network in an uncertain world; Developmental effects on social preferences in frog tadpoles, Rana ornativentris; Evidence for risk-taking behavioural types and potential effects on resource acquisition in a parasitoid wasp; Male residency and dispersal triggers in a seasonal breeder with influential females; Mating experience induces females to avoid harmful males in the beetle Lasioderma serricorne; Transitive foraging behaviour in frog-eating bats; The road to sociality: brood regulation of worker reproduction in the simple eusocial bee Bombus impatiens; Boldness, mate choice and reproductive success in Rissa tridactyla; Precocial juvenile lizards show adult level learning and behavioural flexibility; Exposure to juvenile males during development suppresses female capacity for parthenogenesis in a stick insect; Intrinsic and maternal traits influence personality during early life in Galápagos sea lion, Zalophus wollebaeki, pups; Butterflies do not alter oviposition or larval foraging in response to anthropogenic increases in sodium; Social security: less socially connected marmots produce noisier alarm calls; Mosquitofish use the past experiences of others with risk to make shoaling decisions; The relative importance of local and global visual contrast in mate choice; White-faced capuchin monkeys use both rank and relationship quality to recruit allies; Chimpanzees, but not bonobos, attend more to infant than adult conspecifics; Visual laterality in pigs: monocular viewing influences emotional reactions in pigs; Personality, plasticity and predictability in sticklebacks: bold fish are less plastic and more predictable than shy fish; Applying network analysis to birdsong research; Dude, where's my mark? Creating robust animal identification schemes informed by communication theory;
How social systems persist: learning to build a social network in an uncertain world; Developmental effects on social preferences in frog tadpoles, Rana ornativentris; Evidence for risk-taking behavioural types and potential effects on resource acquisition in a parasitoid wasp; Male residency and dispersal triggers in a seasonal breeder with influential females; Mating experience induces females to avoid harmful males in the beetle Lasioderma serricorne; Transitive foraging behaviour in frog-eating bats; The road to sociality: brood regulation of worker reproduction in the simple eusocial bee Bombus impatiens; Boldness, mate choice and reproductive success in Rissa tridactyla; Precocial juvenile lizards show adult level learning and behavioural flexibility; Exposure to juvenile males during development suppresses female capacity for parthenogenesis in a stick insect; Intrinsic and maternal traits influence personality during early life in Galápagos sea lion, Zalophus wollebaeki, pups; Butterflies do not alter oviposition or larval foraging in response to anthropogenic increases in sodium; Social security: less socially connected marmots produce noisier alarm calls; Mosquitofish use the past experiences of others with risk to make shoaling decisions; The relative importance of local and global visual contrast in mate choice; White-faced capuchin monkeys use both rank and relationship quality to recruit allies; Chimpanzees, but not bonobos, attend more to infant than adult conspecifics; Visual laterality in pigs: monocular viewing influences emotional reactions in pigs; Personality, plasticity and predictability in sticklebacks: bold fish are less plastic and more predictable than shy fish; Applying network analysis to birdsong research; Dude, where's my mark? Creating robust animal identification schemes informed by communication theory;
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Năm xuất bản
2019