carnivores - index of articles

Displaying 51 - 62 of 62. Click a column heading to sort.
Titlesort ascending Authors Year Issue Pages
Biphonation as a prominent feature of the Dhole Cuon alpinus sounds Volodin, I.A. & Volodina, E.V. 2002 2 105-120
Bioacoustics of southern elephant seals. II. Individual and geographical variation in male aggressive vocalisations S. Sanvito & F. Galimberti 2000 4 287-307
Bioacoustics of southern elephant seals. I. Acoustic structure of male aggressive vocalisations S. Sanvito & F. Galimberti 2000 4 259-285
Assessing spontaneous howling rates in captive wolves using automatic passive recorders Vicente Palacios, Shannon M. Barber-Meyer, Bárbara Martí-Domken & Lori J. Schmidt 2022 5 562-574
An Evaluation of Manual and Automated Methods for Detecting Sounds of Maned Wolves (Chrysocyon brachyurus Illiger 1815) Silva Rocha, Luciana; Stamatto Ferreira, L; Paula, B; Guimarães Rodrigues, F; de Sousa Lima Mobley, R 2015 2 185-198
Acoustic prey and a listening predator: interaction between calling katydids and the bat-eared fox Paul B.C. Grant, Michael J. Samways 2015 1 49-61
Acoustic monitoring of golden jackals in Europe: setting the frame for future analyses Carlo Comazzi, Silvana Mattiello, Olivier Friard, Stefano Filacorda & Marco Gamba 2016 3 267-278
Acoustic communication of Pinnipedia in agonistic behaviour [abstract] T. Yu. Lisicina 1996 4 312-313
Acoustic communication and related behaviour of captive European otters Lutra lutra [abstract] Claudio Gnoli, Claudio Prigioni and Paola Polotti 1997 3-4 270-271
Acoustic and temporal features of long distance wolf vocalisations and their possible consequences for signal transmission [abstract] K.-H. Frommolt 2002 1 88
A low-cost, high-performance sound capture and archiving system for the subtidal zone [abstract] D. Mellinger 1998 3 222
A bark of its own kind – the acoustics of ‘annoying’ dog barks suggests a specific attention-evoking effect for humans Nikolett Jégh-Czinege, Tamás Faragó & Péter Pongrácz 2020 2 210-225

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