![]() | McGregor, A., Saggerson, A., Pearce, J., Heyes, C. 2006. Blind imitation in pigeons, Columba livia. Animal Behaviour 72: 287–296. |
![]() | McGregor, P. K., Peake, T. M., Lampe, H. M. 2001. Fighting fish Betta splendens extract relative information from apparent interactions: what happens when what you see is not what you get. Animal Behaviour 62: 1059–1065. |
![]() | McGrew, W. C. 2004. Primatology: Advanced ape technology. Current Biology 14: R1046–R1047. |
![]() | McGrew, W. C. 2007. Savanna chimpanzees dig for food. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104: 19167–19168. |
![]() | McGrew, W. C. 2010. Chimpanzee technology. Science 328: 579–580. |
![]() | McGrew, W. C. 2013. Is primate tool use special? Chimpanzee and New Caledonian crow compared. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences 368: 20120422. |
![]() | McGrew, W. C. 2021. Cultural diffusion occurs in chimpanzees. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118: e2116042118. |
![]() | McGuire, L. P., Ratcliffe, J. M. 2011. Light enough to travel: migratory bats have smaller brains, but not larger hippocampi, than sedentary species. Biology Letters 7: 233–236. |
![]() | McGuire, M. C., Vonk, J. 2018. Gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) fail to learn abstract cues of differential outcomes in a novel cognitive bias test. Animal Behavior and Cognition 5: 103–117. |
![]() | McHenry, L. C., Schürch, R., Johnson, L. E., Ohlinger, B. D., Couvillon, M. J. 2025. Individuality impacts communication success in honey bees. Current Biology 35: R137–R138. |
![]() | McIntosh, B., Dudzinski, K., Mercado III, E. 2015. Do dolphins’ whistles reveal their age and sex. Animal Behavior and Cognition 2: 313–333. |
![]() | McIvor, G. E., Lee, V. E., Thornton, A. 2022. Nesting jackdaws’ responses to human voices vary with local disturbance levels and the gender of the speaker. Animal Behaviour 192: 119–132. |
![]() | McKelvey, E. G. Z., Gyles, J. P., Michie, K., Barquín Pancorbo, V., Sober, L., Kruszewski, L. E., Chan, A., Fabre, C. C. G. 2021. Drosophila females receive male substrate-borne signals through specific leg neurons during courtship. Current Biology 31: 3894–3904.e5. |
![]() | McKenzie, T., Cherman, T., Bird, L. R., Naqshbandi, M., Roberts, W. A. 2004. Can squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus) plan for the future? Studies of temporal myopia in food choice. Learn Behav 32: 377–390. |
![]() | McKinley, J., Sambrook, T. D. 2000. Use of human-given cues by domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) and horses (Equus caballus). Animal Cognition 3: 13–22. |
![]() | McLachlan, J. R., Magrath, R. D. 2020. Speedy revelations: how alarm calls can convey rapid, reliable information about urgent danger. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 287: 20192772. |
![]() | McLachlan, J. R., Ratnayake, C. P., Magrath, R. D. 2019. Personal information about danger trumps social information from avian alarm calls. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 286: 20182945. |
![]() | McLaren, I. P. L., Mackintosh, N. J. 2000. An elemental model of associative learning: I. Latent inhibition and perceptual learning. Animal Learning & Behavior 28: 211–246. |
![]() | McLaughlin, A. L., Westneat, D. F. 2023. House sparrows exhibit individual differences in generalization when confronted with different novel stimuli. Ethology 129: 369–379. |
![]() | McLaughlin, K. E., Kunc, H. P. 2012. Experimentally increased noise levels change spatial and singing behaviour. Biology Letters 9: 20120771. |
<<First < Previous 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 Next > Last >>





