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Acoustic Articles in Animal Behaviour and Ethology August-November 2018

To: "" <>
Subject: Acoustic Articles in Animal Behaviour and Ethology August-November 2018
From: Elke Burkhardt <>
Date: Fri, 7 Dec 2018 08:42:38 +0000

Dear all,

acoustic articles from August to November 2018  in Animal Behaviour and Ethology and, best wishes Elke

 

 

Animal Behaviour, Volume 142, Pages 1-220 (August 2018)

https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/animal-behaviour/vol/142/suppl/C

 

Subspecies status and methods explain strength of response to local versus foreign song by oscine birds in meta-analysis

Timothy H. Parker, Emma I. Greig, Shinichi Nakagawa, Marcelina Parra, Anthony C. Dalisio

Pages 1-17

 

Anthropogenic calling sites boost the sound amplitude of advertisement calls produced by a tropical cricket

Bettina Erregger, Arne K.D. Schmidt

Pages 31-38

 

To compete or not to compete: bushcricket song plasticity reveals male body condition and rival distance

Marianna Anichini, Karl-Heinz Frommolt, Gerlind U.C. Lehmann

Pages 59-68

 

The importance of group vocal behaviour in roost finding

Maria Sagot, Caroline R. Schöner, Abigail J. Jago, Imran Razik, Gloriana Chaverri

Pages 157-164

 

Commentary

Working hypotheses on the meaning of general alarm calls

Guillaume Dezecache, Mélissa Berthet

Pages 113-118

 

Animal Behaviour, Volume 143, 1-226 (September 2018)

https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/animal-behaviour/vol/143/suppl/C

 

Sing and do not stray: male rufous-and-white wrens use duets and physical behaviours to guard their mates

Zachary A. Kahn, Christopher Moser-Purdy, Daniel J. Mennill

Pages 35-42

 

Cognitive constraints on optimal foraging in frog-eating bats

Claire T. Hemingway, Michael J. Ryan, Rachel A. Page

Pages 43-50

 

Social context-dependent provisioning rules in red-winged fairy-wrens do not vary with signals of increased chick need

K.J. MacLeod, L. Brouwer

Pages 105-111

 

Commentary

Signal or cue? Locomotion-induced sounds and the evolution of communication   
Pages 83-91
Christopher J. Clark

 

Animal Behaviour, Volume 144 Pages e1-e16, 1-152 (October 2018)

https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/animal-behaviour/vol/144/suppl/C         

 

Obligate, but not facultative, satellite males prefer the same male sexual signal characteristics as females

Rachel Olzer, Marlene Zuk

Pages 37-43

 

Animal Behaviour, Volume 145, Pages 1-174 (November 2018)

https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/animal-behaviour/vol/143/suppl/C

 

Convenience polyandry and the role of lone and reciprocal calls in a psyllid
Pages 1-10
Available Online 2018-10-01
U.K. Lubanga, R.A. Peters, M.J. Steinbauer

 

Presence of a potential competitor and its individual identity modulate ultrasonic vocalizations in male hamsters
Pages 11-27
Available Online 2018-10-02
Marcela Fernández-Vargas

 

Barn owl nestlings vocally escalate when interrupted by a sibling: evidence from an interactive playback experiment
Pages 51-57
Available Online 2018-10-10
Pauline Ducouret, Amélie N. Dreiss, Charlène Gémard, Xavier Falourd, Alexandre Roulin

 

Wolf howls encode both sender- and context-specific information
Pages 59-66
Available Online 2018-10-11
Stuart K. Watson, Simon W. Townsend, Friederike Range

A new statistical method to test equivalence: an application in male and female eastern bluebird song
Pages 77-85
Available Online 2018-10-12
Evangeline M. Rose, Thomas Mathew, Derek A. Coss, Bernard Lohr, Kevin E. Omland

 

Temporal structuring of vigilance behaviour by female Thomson's gazelles with hidden fawns
Pages 87-97
Available Online 2018-10-12
Blair R. Costelloe, Daniel I. Rubenstein

 

Kinship and association do not explain vocal repertoire variation among individual sperm whales or social units
Pages 131-140
Available Online 2018-10-23
Christine M. Konrad, Timothy R. Frasier, Luke Rendell, Hal Whitehead, Shane Gero

 

Experimental evidence that titi and saki monkey alarm calls deter an ambush predator
Pages 141-147
Available Online 2018-10-24
Dara B. Adams, Dawn M. Kitchen

 

 

Ethology Volume 124, Issue 8, Pages: i-iii, 527-622 (August 2018)

 

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/14390310/2018/124/8

 

Soft songs in male ortolan buntings are used in an aggressive context but are not an aggressive signal.

Aleksandra Jakubowska and Tomasz S. Osiejuk

First published: 24 May 2018

https://doi.org/10.1111/eth.12758

 

Ravens adjust their antipredatory responses to con- and heterospecific alarms to the perceived threat.

Jana Nácarová, Petr Veselý and Thomas Bugnyar

First published: 19 June 2018

https://doi.org/10.1111/eth.12764

 

 

Ethology Volume 124, Issue 9, Pages: i-iii, 623-694 (September 2018)

 

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/14390310/2018/124/9

 

Limited flexibility in female Pacific field cricket (Teleogryllus oceanicus) exploratory behaviors in response to perceived social environment.

Justa L. HeinenKay, Daina B. Strub and Marlene Zuk

First published: 20 June 2018

https://doi.org/10.1111/eth.12767

 

 

BEHAVIOURAL NOTES

 

Tree cricket baffles are manufactured tools

Natasha Mhatre

First published: 01 July 2018

https://doi.org/10.1111/eth.12773

 

 

 

 

Ethology Volume 124, Issue 10, Pages: i-iii, 695-776 (October 2018)

 

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/14390310/2018/124/10

 

Quiet violence: Savannah Sparrows respond to playback- simulated rivals using low‐amplitude songs as aggressive signals.

Ines G. Moran, Stéphanie M. Doucet, Amy E. M. Newman, D. Ryan Norris and Daniel J. Mennill

First published: 11 September 2018

https://doi.org/10.1111/eth.12805

 

 

Advertising individual identity by mother and adolescent contact calls in Siberian wapiti Cervus elaphus sibiricus.

Olga V. Sibiryakova, Ilya A. Volodin and Elena V. Volodina

First published: 16 August 2018

https://doi.org/10.1111/eth.12804

 

 

 

Ethology Volume 124, Issue 11, Pages: i-iii, 777-843 (November 2018)

 

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/14390310/2018/124/11

 

Testosterone pulses at the nest site modify ultrasonic vocalization types in a monogamous and territorial mouse

Mary E. Timonin Matina C. KalcounisRueppell Catherine A. Marler

Pages: 804-815

First published: 17 October 2018

https://doi.org/10.1111/eth.12812

 

 

 

 

Elke Burkhardt

 

Ocean Acoustics Lab

Alfred-Wegener-Institut

Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und Meeresforschung

 

Building G

Klußmannstraße 3d

D- 27570 Bremerhaven

 

Email: m("awi.de","elke.burkhardt");">

Fon:  +49-471-4831-1861

Fax:  +49-471-4831-1149

 

 

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