Harrison, Rachel A Mohr, Tecla van de Waal, Erica
Published in
The Journal of animal ecology
Touchscreen technology has provided researchers with opportunities to conduct well-controlled cognitive tests with captive animals, allowing researchers to isolate individuals, select participants based on specific traits, and control aspects of the environment. In this study, we aimed to investigate the potential utility of touchscreen technology ...
Demartsev, Vlad Haddas-Sasson, Michal Ilany, Amiyaal Koren, Lee Geffen, Eli
Published in
The Journal of animal ecology
Rhythmic stability (nonrandom temporal structure) is required for many neural and physiological functions, whereas rhythmic irregularities can indicate genetic or developmental deficiencies. Therefore, rhythmic courtship or contest signals are widespread in nature as honest advertisement displays. Examination of bird songs revealed the pervasivenes...
Wild, Sonja Alarcón-Nieto, Gustavo Chimento, Michael Aplin, Lucy M
Published in
The Journal of animal ecology
Advances in biologging technologies have significantly improved our ability to track individual animals' behaviour in their natural environment. Beyond observations, automation of data collection has revolutionized cognitive experiments in the wild. For example, radio-frequency identification (RFID) antennae embedded in 'puzzle box' devices have al...
Mannion, Kelly Ray Ballare, Elizabeth F Marks, Markus Gruber, Thibaud
Published in
The Journal of animal ecology
Determining the cultural propensities or cultural behaviours of a species during foraging entails an investigation of underlying drivers and motivations. In this article, we propose a multicomponent approach involving behaviour, ecology, and physiology to accelerate the study of cultural propensities in the wild. We propose as the first component t...
Barrett, Brendan J
Published in
The Journal of animal ecology
Two-option choice experimental designs are the most commonly employed framework for identifying evidence of social learning or social learning strategies in captive and wild populations. In nature, however, animals often choose from more than two behaviours, and multiple innovations may arise simultaneously. Studies of animal social learning are of...
Dugovich, Brian S Beechler, Brianna R Dolan, Brian P Crowhurst, Rachel S Gonzales, Ben J Powers, Jenny G Hughson, Debra L Vu, Regina K Epps, Clinton W Jolles, Anna E
...
Published in
The Journal of animal ecology
Habitat fragmentation is an important driver of biodiversity loss and can be remediated through management actions aimed at maintenance of natural connectivity in metapopulations. Connectivity may protect populations from infectious diseases by preserving immunogenetic diversity and disease resistance. However, connectivity could exacerbate the ris...
Hockridge, Evan G Singh, Jenia Boucher, Peter B Davies, Andrew B
Published in
The Journal of animal ecology
Fire regimes are expected to change with climate change, resulting in a crucial need to understand the specific ways in which variable fire regimes impact important contributors to ecosystem functioning, such as mound-building termites. Termite mounds and fire are both important agents of savanna ecosystem heterogeneity and functioning, but there i...
Hoenle, Philipp O Staab, Michael Donoso, David A Argoti, Adriana Blüthgen, Nico
Published in
The Journal of animal ecology
Microhabitat differentiation of species communities such as vertical stratification in tropical forests contributes to species coexistence and thus biodiversity. However, little is known about how the extent of stratification changes during forest recovery and influences community reassembly. Environmental filtering determines community reassembly ...
Zong, Xin Wang, Tiejun Skidmore, Andrew K Heurich, Marco
Published in
The Journal of animal ecology
Visibility (viewshed) plays a significant and diverse role in animals' behaviour and fitness. Understanding how visibility influences animal behaviour requires the measurement of habitat visibility at spatial scales commensurate to individual animal choices. However, measuring habitat visibility at a fine spatial scale over a landscape is a challen...
Brlík, Vojtěch Procházka, Petr Hansson, Bengt Stricker, Craig A Yohannes, Elizabeth Powell, Rebecca L Wunder, Michael B
Published in
The Journal of animal ecology
Climatic conditions affect animals but range-wide impacts at the population level remain largely unknown, especially in migratory species. However, studying climate-population relationships is still challenging in small migrants due to a lack of efficient and cost-effective geographic tracking method. Spatial distribution patterns of environmental ...