Amanote Research
Register
Sign In
Discover open access scientific publications
Search, annotate, share and cite publications
Publications by Jeroen Koorevaar
A Stab in the Dark: Chick Killing by Brood Parasitic Honeyguides
Biology Letters
Agricultural
Biological Sciences
Related publications
Under the Radar: Detection Avoidance in Brood Parasitic Bees
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Biochemistry
Agricultural
Genetics
Molecular Biology
Biological Sciences
Understanding the Loss of Maternal Care in Avian Brood Parasites Using Preoptic Area Transcriptome Comparisons in Brood Parasitic and Non-Parasitic Blackbirds
G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
Medicine
Genetics
Molecular Biology
Females Have a Larger Hippocampus Than Males in the Brood-Parasitic Brown-Headed Cowbird.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Multidisciplinary
A Stab in the Dark: A Case Report of an Atypical Presentation of Giant Cell Arteritis (GCA)
Geriatrics (Switzerland)
Aging
Gerontology
Geriatrics
Health
Song Learning in Brood-Parasitic indigobirdsVidua Chalybeata: Song Mimicry of the Host Species
Animal Behaviour
Evolution
Ecology
Systematics
Animal Science
Behavior
Zoology
Evidence for Aggressive Mimicry in an Adult Brood Parasitic Bird, and Generalized Defences in Its Host
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Genetics
Molecular Biology
Environmental Science
Biochemistry
Microbiology
Immunology
Biological Sciences
Medicine
Agricultural
Song Mimicry of Black-Bellied Firefinch Lagonosticta Rara and Other Finches by the Brood-Parasitic Cameroon Indigobird Vidua Camerunensis in West Africa
Ibis
Evolution
Ecology
Nature
Systematics
Animal Science
Landscape Conservation
Behavior
Zoology
Rarely Parasitized and Unparasitized Species Mob and Alarm Call to Cuckoos: Implications for Sparrowhawk Mimicry by Brood Parasitic Cuckoos
Wilson Journal of Ornithology
Evolution
Ecology
Systematics
Animal Science
Behavior
Zoology
Honey Bee Colonies Headed by Hyperpolyandrous Queens Have Improved Brood Rearing Efficiency and Lower Infestation Rates of Parasitic Varroa Mites
PLoS ONE
Multidisciplinary