Pages that link to "Q24652855"
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The following pages link to Great tits search for, capture, kill and eat hibernating bats (Q24652855):
Displaying 16 items.
- Social learning in birds and its role in shaping a foraging niche (Q28742173) (← links)
- Variability in Echolocation Call Intensity in a Community of Horseshoe Bats: A Role for Resource Partitioning or Communication? (Q30479503) (← links)
- Larger groups of passerines are more efficient problem solvers in the wild. (Q35229112) (← links)
- Diet specialization in a generalist population: the case of breeding great tits Parus major in the Mediterranean area (Q35633983) (← links)
- Cool running: locomotor performance at low body temperature in mammals (Q36231321) (← links)
- Environmental and genetic determinants of innovativeness in a natural population of birds (Q36658635) (← links)
- Do predators influence the behaviour of bats? (Q38076498) (← links)
- Bat Predation by Cercopithecus Monkeys: Implications for Zoonotic Disease Transmission (Q40107639) (← links)
- Sociality influences thermoregulation and roost switching in a forest bat using ephemeral roosts (Q41132186) (← links)
- The aspects of evolutionary biology. Editorial 2011 (Q42585663) (← links)
- Light enough to travel or wise enough to stay? Brain size evolution and migratory behavior in birds (Q46513958) (← links)
- Hibernation is associated with increased survival and the evolution of slow life histories among mammals. (Q51161536) (← links)
- Personality and problem-solving performance explain competitive ability in the wild (Q51853329) (← links)
- Bats as prey of diurnal birds: a global perspective (Q55865605) (← links)
- Sex differences in learning ability in a common songbird, the great tit—females are better observational learners than males (Q56602948) (← links)
- Frequent or scarce? Damage to flight-enabling body parts in bats (Chiroptera) (Q92073192) (← links)