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 | Behaviour 2002, Vol 139 |
A Liker, Z Barta | The effects of dominance on social foraging tactic use in house sparrows | 1061-1076 |
A Widdig, P Nurnberg, M Krawczak, WJ Streich, F Bercovitch | Affiliation and aggression among adult female rhesus macaques: A genetic analysis of paternal cohorts | 371-391 |
AH Korstjens, EHM Sterck, R Noe | How adaptive or phylogenetically inert is primate social behaviour? A test with two sympatric colobines | 203-225 |
B Dane | Retention of offspring in a wild population of ungulates | 1-21 |
BG Stokke, M Honza, A Moksnes, E Roskaft, G Rudolfsen | Costs associated with recognition and rejection of parasitic eggs in two European passerines | 629-644 |
C Moskat, J Szentpeteri, Z Barta | Adaptations by great reed warblers brood parasitism: A comparison of populations in sympatry and allopatry with the common cuckoo | 1313-1329 |
CJ Gronlund, MD Deangelis, S PruettJones, PS Ward, JA Coyne | Mate grasping in Drosophila pegasa | 545-572 |
CK Hemelrijk | Despotic societies, sexual attraction and the emergence of male 'tolerance': An agent-based model | 729-747 |
DJ White, AP King, MJ West | Plasticity in adult development: Experience with young males enhances mating competence in adult male cowbirds, Molothrus ater | 713-728 |
DP Chivers, RS Mirza, JG Johnston | Learned recognition of heterospecific alarm cues enhances survival during encounters with predators | 929-938 |
DP Watts | Reciprocity and interchange in the social relationships of wild male chimpanzees | 343-370 |
DT Gwynne, LF Bussiere | Female mating swarms increase predation risk in a 'role-reversed' dance fly (Diptera: Empididae: Rhamphomyia longicauda Loew) | 1425-1430 |
E Roskaft, A Moksnes, BG Stokke, V Bicik, C Moskat | Aggression to dummy cuckoos by potential European cuckoo hosts | 613-628 |
F Aureli, CM Schaffner | Relationship assessment through emotional mediation | 393-420 |
F Colmenares, F Zaragoza, MV HernandezLloreda | Grooming and coercion in one-male units of hamadryas baboons: Market forces or relationship constraints? | 1525-1553 |
G Illmann, L Schrader, M Spinka, P Sustr | Acoustical mother-offspring recognition in pigs (Sus scrofa domestica) | 487-505 |
G Machado, PS Oliveira | Maternal care in the neotropical harvestman Bourguyia albiornata (Arachnida: Opiliones): Oviposition site selection and egg protection | 1509-1524 |
GE Brown, DL Gershaneck, DL Plata, JL Golub | Ontogenetic changes in response to heterospecific alarm cues by juvenile largemouth bass are phenotypically plastic | 913-927 |
HF Japyassu, C Viera | Predatory plasticity in Nephilengys cruentata (Araneae : Tetragnathidae): Relevance for phylogeny reconstruction | 529-544 |
I Szentirmai, T Szekely | Do Kentish plovers regulate the amount of their nest material? An experimental test | 847-859 |
J Maletinska, M Spinka, J Vichova, I Stehulova | Individual recognition of piglets by sows in the early post-partum period | 975-991 |
J Secondi, MAG DeBakker, C TenCate | Female responses to male coos in the collared dove Streptopelia decaocto | 1287-1302 |
J Stamps, M CalderondeAnda, C Perez, H Drummond | Collaborative tactics for nestsite selection by pairs of blue footed boobies | 1383-1412 |
JB Silk | XVIIIth Congress of the International Primatological Society in Adelaide, Australia, 7-12 January 2001 - Introduction | 173-175 |
JB Silk | Using the'F'-word in primatology | 421-446 |
JL WorthamNeal | Intraspecific agonistic interactions of Squilla empusa (Crustacea : Stomatopoda) | 463-486 |
JP Veiga, J Moreno, M Arenas, S Sanchez | Reproductive consequences for males of paternal vs territorial strategies in the polygynous spotless starling under variable ecological and social conditions | 677-693 |
JR Rohr, DM Madison, AM Sullivan | The ontogeny of chemically-mediated antipredator behaviours in newts (Notophthalmus viridescens): Responses to injured and non-injured conspecifics | 1043-1060 |
K Karino, J Matsunaga | Female mate preference is for male total length, not tail length in feral guppies | 1491-1508 |
K Kraaijeveld, RA Mulder | The function of triumph ceremonies in the black swan | 45-54 |
KB Strier, LT Dib, JEC Figueira | Social dynamics of male muriquis (Brachyteles arachnoides hypoxanthus) | 315-342 |
L Barrett, SP Henzi | Constraints on relationship formation among female primates | 263-289 |
L Lefebvre, N Nicolakakis, D Boire | Tools and brains in birds | 939-973 |
LA Isbell, TP Young | Ecological models of female social relationships in primates: Similarities, disparities, and some directions for future clarity | 177-202 |
LM GomezLaplaza | Social status and investigatory behaviour in the angelfish (Pterophyllum scalare) | 1469-1490 |
LW Beukeboom, J vandenAssem | Courtship displays of introgressed, interspecific hybrid nasonia males: Further investigations into the 'grandfather effect' | 1029-1042 |
M Cords | Friendship among adult female blue monkeys (Cercopithecus mitis) | 291-314 |
M Draud, PAE Lynch | Asymmetric contests for breeding sites between monogamous pairs of convict cichlids (Archocentrus nigrofasciatum, Cichlidae): Pair experience pays | 861-873 |
M Miyazaki, JR Waas | 'Last word' effects of male advertising calls on female preference in little blue penguins | 1413-1423 |
M Parisot, E Vallet, L Nagle, M Kreutzer | Male canaries discriminate among songs: Call rate is a reliable measure | 55-63 |
M Spinka, I Stehulova, J Zacharova, J Maletinska, G Illmann | Nursing behaviour and nursing vocalisations in domestic sows: Repeatability and relationship with maternal investment | 1077-1097 |
MD Gonzaga, J VasconcellosNeto | Influence of collective feeding on weight gain and size variability of Anelosimus jabaquara Levi 1956 (Araneae: Theridiidae) | 1431-1442 |
MD Gonzaga, J VasconcellosNeto | Collective prey capture and feeding behaviours of Anelosimus jabaquara Levi 1956 (Araneae : Theridiidae) | 573-584 |
N Cadieu, JC Cadieu | Is use of a novel food source by young canaries (Serinus canarius) influenced by the sex and familiarity of the adult demonstrator? | 825-846 |
N Corp, RW Byrne | The ontogeny of manual skill in wild chimpanzees: Evidence from feeding on the fruit of Saba florida | 137-168 |
N Rahman, DW Dunham, CK Govind | Size-assortative pairing in the big-clawed snapping shrimp, Alpheus heterochelis | 1443-1468 |
N Seddon | The structure, context and possible functions of solos, duets and choruses in the subdesert mesite (Monias benschi) | 645-676 |
N Seddon, JA Tobias, A Alvarez | Vocal communication in the pale-winged trumpeter (Psophia leucoptera): Repertoire, context and functional reference | 1331-1359 |
NE Collias, RJ Barfield, ES Tarvyd | Testosterone versus psychological castration in the expression of dominance, territoriality and breeding behavior by male village weavers (Ploceus cucullatus) | 801-824 |
PA Guerra, GK Morris | Calling communication in meadow katydids (Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae): Female preferences for species-specific wingstroke rates | 23-43 |
RIM Dunbar, L Cornah, FJ Daly, KM Bowyer | Vigilance in human groups: A test of alternative hypotheses | 695-711 |
RR Jackson, RJ Clark, DP Harlan | Behavioural and cognitive influences of kairomones on an araneophagic jumping spider | 749-775 |
S Boinski, K Sughrue, L Selvaggi, R Quatrone, M Henry, S Cropp | An expanded test of the ecological model of primate social evolution: Competitive regimes and female bonding in three species of squirrel monkeys (Saimiri oerstedii, S. boliviensis, and S. sciureus) | 227-261 |
SA Wich, PR Assink, F Becher, EHM Sterck | Playbacks of loud calls to wild Thomas langurs (Primates; Presbytis thomasi): The effect of location | 65-78 |
SA Wich, PR Assink, F Becher, EHM Sterck | Playbacks of loud calls to wild thomas langurs (Primates; Presbytis thomasi): The effect of familiarity | 79-87 |
SD Alemadi, BD Wisenden | Antipredator response to injury-released chemical alarm cues by convict cichlid young before and after independence from parental protection | 603-611 |
SN Gershman, PA Verrell | To persuade or be persuaded: Which sex controls mating in a plethodontid salamander? | 447-462 |
SR Heise, FM Rozenfeld | Effect of odour cues on the exploratory behaviour of female common voles living in matriarchal groups | 897-911 |
SR Partan | Single and multichannel signal composition: Facial expressions and vocalizations of rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) | 993-1027 |
TC Sparkes, DP Keogh, TH Orsburn | Female resistance and mating outcomes in a stream-dwelling isopod: Effects of male energy reserves and mating history | 875-895 |
TL Rogers, DH Cato | Individual variation in the acoustic behaviour of the adult male leopard seal, Hydrurga leptonyx | 1267-1286 |
TM McCarthy, BF Dickey | Chemically mediated effects of injured prey on behavior of both prey and predators | 585-602 |
TWP Friedl, GM Klump | The vocal behaviour of male European treefrogs (Hyla arborea): Implications for inter- and intrasexual selection | 113-136 |
TWP Friedl, GM Klump | Extrapair paternity in the red bishop (Euplectes orix): Is there evidence for the good-genes hypothesis? | 777-800 |
V Canoine, TJ Hayden, K Rowe, W Goymann | The stress response of European stonechats depends on the type of stressor | 1303-1311 |
W Forstmeier | Factors contributing to male mating success in the polygynous dusky warbler (Phylloscopus fuscatus) | 1361-1381 |
W Forstmeier, TJS Balsby | Why mated dusky warblers sing so much: Territory guarding and male quality announcement | 89-111 |
YE Morbey | The mate-guarding behaviour of male kokanee Oncorhynchus nerka | 507-528 |