Although there is growing evidence that birds may have individual chemical profiles that can function in several social contexts, offspring recognition based on olfactory cues has never been explored. This ability should be more likely evolved in colonial birds and/or species suffering brood parasitism, in which the risk of being engaged in costly misdirected parental care is high., a species that is colonial, and where a fraction of the population is exposed to intraspecific brood parasitism, can discriminate between the scent of their offspring and that of unrelated nestlings. We also explored whether the development of the uropygial gland secretion may play a role in such olfactory discrimination by performing the choice experiments to f...
Burrow nesting procellariiform seabirds use olfactory cues for both foraging and nest recognition. A...
Possibly due to the small size of the olfactory bulb (OB) as compared to rodents, it was generally b...
Golüke S, Dörrenberg S, Krause ET, Caspers B. Female Zebra Finches smell their eggs. PLOS ONE. 2016;...
Although there is growing evidence that birds may have individual chemical profiles that can functio...
Background: Although there is growing evidence that birds may have individual chemical profiles that...
Reliably recognizing their own nest provides parents with a necessary skill to invest time and resou...
Parental investment in unrelated offspring seems maladaptive from an evolutionary perspective, due t...
Parental investment in unrelated offspring seems maladaptive from an evolutionary perspective, due t...
Caspers B, Krause ET. Odour-based natal nest recognition in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata), a...
<p>Number of female spotless starlings that chose the side of the chamber containing the scent of th...
<div><p>Avian communication has been traditionally believed to be mainly mediated by visual and audi...
Avian communication has been traditionally believed to be mainly mediated by visual and auditory cha...
Caspers B, Hagelin JC, Paul M, Bock S, Willeke S, Krause ET. Zebra Finch chicks recognise parental s...
Krause T, Caspers B. Do Diamond Firetails (Stagonopleura guttata) recognise the scent of their nest ...
Burrow nesting procellariiform seabirds use olfactory cues for both foraging and nest recognition. A...
Burrow nesting procellariiform seabirds use olfactory cues for both foraging and nest recognition. A...
Possibly due to the small size of the olfactory bulb (OB) as compared to rodents, it was generally b...
Golüke S, Dörrenberg S, Krause ET, Caspers B. Female Zebra Finches smell their eggs. PLOS ONE. 2016;...
Although there is growing evidence that birds may have individual chemical profiles that can functio...
Background: Although there is growing evidence that birds may have individual chemical profiles that...
Reliably recognizing their own nest provides parents with a necessary skill to invest time and resou...
Parental investment in unrelated offspring seems maladaptive from an evolutionary perspective, due t...
Parental investment in unrelated offspring seems maladaptive from an evolutionary perspective, due t...
Caspers B, Krause ET. Odour-based natal nest recognition in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata), a...
<p>Number of female spotless starlings that chose the side of the chamber containing the scent of th...
<div><p>Avian communication has been traditionally believed to be mainly mediated by visual and audi...
Avian communication has been traditionally believed to be mainly mediated by visual and auditory cha...
Caspers B, Hagelin JC, Paul M, Bock S, Willeke S, Krause ET. Zebra Finch chicks recognise parental s...
Krause T, Caspers B. Do Diamond Firetails (Stagonopleura guttata) recognise the scent of their nest ...
Burrow nesting procellariiform seabirds use olfactory cues for both foraging and nest recognition. A...
Burrow nesting procellariiform seabirds use olfactory cues for both foraging and nest recognition. A...
Possibly due to the small size of the olfactory bulb (OB) as compared to rodents, it was generally b...
Golüke S, Dörrenberg S, Krause ET, Caspers B. Female Zebra Finches smell their eggs. PLOS ONE. 2016;...