All Stories

  1. Mobbing sequences of American wrens elicit mobbing responses in European tits
  2. Birding specialization and satisfaction in Australian birders – a Big Year is not a big issue
  3. Discrimination of familiar and unfamiliar human voices is independent of prolonged human-animal interaction in domestic chicks
  4. Nuthatch (Sitta europaea) responses towards simulated territorial intrusion (STI) vary in strength during the non-breeding season — a matter of temperature and photoperiod?
  5. Relative divergence of mobbing calls and songs structures in passerine birds
  6. The impact of high temperatures on bird responses to alarm calls
  7. Information transfer during mobbing: call rate is more important than the number of callers in a southern temperate passerine
  8. The number of Great Tit mobbers influences the mobbing response of heterospecific birds
  9. Western Australian magpies respond to urgency information contained in conspecific alarm calls
  10. Effects of domestication on responses of chickens and red junglefowl to conspecific calls: A pilot study
  11. Australian Magpies discriminate between the territorial calls of intra‐ and extra‐group conspecifics
  12. How great tits respond to urgency‐based information in allopatric Southern house wren mobbing calls
  13. Is the urgency message encoded in heterospecific alarm calls perceived by domestic chickens?
  14. Season does not influence the response of great tits (Parus major) to allopatric mobbing calls
  15. Female Western Australian magpies discriminate between familiar and unfamiliar human voices
  16. Biological conclusions about importance of order in mobbing calls vary with the reproductive context in Great Tits ( Parus major )
  17. Mobbing responses of great tits ( Parus major ) do not depend on the number of heterospecific callers
  18. Number of callers may affect the response to conspecific mobbing calls in great tits (Parus major)
  19. Wild great tits’ alarm calls prompt vigilant behaviours in free-range chickens
  20. Australian magpies adjust their alarm calls according to predator distance
  21. Females sing more often and at higher frequencies than males in Australian magpies
  22. Great tit responses to the calls of an unfamiliar species suggest conserved perception of call ordering
  23. Hissing like a snake: bird hisses are similar to snake hisses and prompt similar anxiety behavior in a mammalian model
  24. The role of associative learning process on the response of fledgling great tits (Parus major) to mobbing calls
  25. Syntax manipulation changes perception of mobbing call sequences across passerine species
  26. Seasonal variation in mobbing behaviour of passerine birds
  27. Mobbing calls: a signal transcending species boundaries
  28. Mobbing behaviour in a passerine community increases with prevalence in predator diet
  29. Mobbing behaviour varies according to predator dangerousness and occurrence