![]() | King, B. J. 2024. Valuing animal lives. Science 385: 502–502. |
![]() | King, G. E. 2022. Baboon perspectives on the ecology and behavior of early human ancestors. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 119: e2116182119. |
![]() | King, L. E., Douglas-Hamilton, I., Vollrath, F. 2007. African elephants run from the sound of disturbed bees. Current Biology 17: R832–R833. |
![]() | King, S. L. 2015. You talkin’ to me? Interactive playback is a powerful yet underused tool in animal communication research. Biology Letters 11: 20150403. |
![]() | King, S. L. 2022. The evolutionary roots of cooperation. Current Biology 32: R249–R251. |
![]() | King, S. L., Allen, S. J., Krützen, M., Connor, R. C. 2019. Vocal behaviour of allied male dolphins during cooperative mate guarding. Animal Cognition 22: 991–1000. |
![]() | King, S. L., Connor, R. C., Krützen, M., Allen, S. J. 2021. Cooperation-based concept formation in male bottlenose dolphins. Nature Communications 12: 1–11. |
![]() | King, S. L., Friedman, W. R., Allen, S. J., Gerber, L., Jensen, F. H., Wittwer, S., Connor, R. C., Krützen, M. 2018. Bottlenose dolphins retain individual vocal labels in multi-level alliances. Current Biology 28: 1993–1999.e3. |
![]() | King, S. L., Guarino, E., Donegan, K., McMullen, C., Jaakkola, K. 2021. Evidence that bottlenose dolphins can communicate with vocal signals to solve a cooperative task. Royal Society Open Science 8: 202073. |
![]() | King, S. L., Harley, H. E., Janik, V. M. 2014. The role of signature whistle matching in bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus. Animal Behaviour 96: 79–86. |
![]() | King, S. L., Janik, V. M. 2013. Bottlenose dolphins can use learned vocal labels to address each other. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110: 13216–13221. |
![]() | King, S. L., Janik, V. M. 2015. Come dine with me: food-associated social signalling in wild bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus). Animal Cognition 18: 969–974. |
![]() | King, S. L., McGregor, P. K. 2016. Vocal matching: the what, the why and the how. Biology Letters 12: 20160666. |
![]() | King, S. L., Sayigh, L. S., Wells, R. S., Fellner, W., Janik, V. M. 2013. Vocal copying of individually distinctive signature whistles in bottlenose dolphins. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences 280: 20130053. |
![]() | Kingma, S. A. 2017. Direct benefits explain interspecific variation in helping behaviour among cooperatively breeding birds. Nature Communications 8: 1094. |
![]() | Kingma, S. A. 2018. Food, friends or family: What drives delayed dispersal in group-living animals?. Journal of Animal Ecology 87: 1205–1208. |
![]() | Kingma, S. A. 2023. Social evolution: Life is better in groups. Current Biology 33: R773–R775. |
![]() | Kingma, S. A., Székely, T. 2019. Social behaviour: Males help when mates are rare. Current Biology 29: R370–R372. |
![]() | Kings, M., Arbon, J. J., McIvor, G. E., Whitaker, M., Radford, A. N., Lerner, J., Thornton, A. 2023. Wild jackdaws can selectively adjust their social associations while preserving valuable long-term relationships. Nature Communications 14: 5103. |
![]() | Kingston, A. C. N., Chappell, D. R., Speiser, D. I. 2020. A snapping shrimp has the fastest vision of any aquatic animal. Biology Letters 16: 20200298. |
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