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201 results on '"bioacoustics"'

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1. Reproductive state alters vocal characteristics of female North American red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus).

2. Machine learning reveals that climate, geography, and cultural drift all predict bird song variation in coastal Zonotrichia leucophrys.

3. Measuring factors affecting honey bee (Hymenoptera: Apidae) attraction to soybeans using bioacoustics monitoring.

4. Movement or plasticity: acoustic responses of a torrent frog to stream geophony.

5. Machine learning reveals singing rhythms of male Pacific field crickets are clock controlled.

6. Changes in the acoustic structure of Australian bird communities along a habitat complexity gradient.

7. A novel cricket morph has diverged in song and wing morphology across island populations.

8. Unmasking hidden genetic, vocal, and size variation in the Masked Flowerpiercer along the Andes supports two species separated by Northern Peruvian Low.

9. Applications of machine learning to identify and characterize the sounds produced by fish.

10. The shape of water: adaptations of cochlea morphology in seals and otters.

11. Passive acoustic monitoring indicates Barred Owls are established in northern coastal California and management intervention is warranted.

12. Paired passive acoustic and gillnet sampling reveal the utility of bioacoustics for monitoring fish populations in a turbid estuary.

13. Phenotypic differentiation in populations of a gladiator tree frog: environment, genetic drift and sexual selection.

14. Chasing inter-species communication: what marine mammals are telling us about our oceans.

15. Temporal occurrence of three blue whale populations in New Zealand waters from passive acoustic monitoring.

16. Environment rather than character displacement explains call evolution in glassfrogs.

17. Birds living near airports do not show consistently higher levels of feather corticosterone.

18. Passive acoustic monitoring provides predictable and reliable underestimates of population size and longevity in wild Savannah Sparrows.

19. First use of acoustic calls to distinguish cryptic members of a fish species complex.

20. Automated bird sound classifications of long-duration recordings produce occupancy model outputs similar to manually annotated data.

21. Genetic, bioacoustic and morphological analyses reveal cryptic speciation in the warbling vireo complex (Vireo gilvus: Vireonidae: Passeriformes).

22. Genetic, morphological and acoustic differentiation of African trident bats (Rhinonycteridae: Triaenops).

23. Avian taxonomy in turmoil: The 7-point rule is poorly reproducible and may overlook substantial cryptic diversity.

24. Ecological and evolutionary drivers of geographic variation in songs of a Neotropical suboscine bird: The Drab-breasted Bamboo Tyrant (Hemitriccus diops, Rhynchocyclidae).

25. Individual distinctiveness across call types of the southern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum simum).

26. Does abiotic noise promote segregation of functional diversity in Neotropical anuran assemblages?

27. Look closely and listen carefully: unexpected cicada diversity in northern Sardinia, with the description of a new species (Cicadidae: Tibicina).

28. Systematics and historical biogeography of Neotropical foam-nesting frogs of the Adenomera heyeri clade (Leptodactylidae), with the description of six new Amazonian species.

29. Mark–recapture of individually distinctive calls—a case study with signature whistles of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus).

30. Passive acoustic monitoring effectively detects Northern Spotted Owls and Barred Owls over a range of forest conditions.

31. Early detection of rapid Barred Owl population growth within the range of the California Spotted Owl advises the Precautionary Principle.

32. Acoustic community structure and seasonal turnover in tropical South Asian birds.

33. effects of stress and glucocorticoids on vocalizations: a test in North American red squirrels.

34. sounds of fighting: contests between violet vinegar crabs, Episesarma versicolor (Tweedie, 1940) (Decapoda: Brachyura: Sesarmidae), are resolved through acoustic communication.

35. Vocal repertoire of captive northern and southern flying squirrels (Glaucomys sabrinus and G. volans).

36. Reaching the edge of the speciation continuum: hybridization between three sympatric species of Hyla tree frogs.

37. Ontogeny of vocal rhythms in harbor seal pups: an exploratory study.

38. Terrestrial Passive Acoustic Monitoring: Review and Perspectives.

39. Integrative taxonomy resolves three new cryptic species of small southern African horseshoe bats (Rhinolophus).

40. Phylogenetic and adaptive components of the anuran advertisement call correlate with temporal species co-occurrence.

41. Noise from four types of extractive energy infrastructure affects song features of Savannah Sparrows.

42. Evolution of advertisement calls in an island radiation of African reed frogs.

43. How the environment shapes animal signals: a test of the acoustic adaptation hypothesis in frogs.

44. Noise from four types of extractive energy infrastructure affects song features of Savannah Sparrows.

45. Morphological determinants of signal carrier frequency in katydids (Orthoptera): a comparative analysis using biophysical evidence of wing vibration.

46. Complex songs and cryptic ethospecies: the case of the Ducetia japonica group (Orthoptera: Tettigonioidea: Phaneropteridae: Phaneropterinae).

47. Duetting behavior varies with sex, season, and singing role in a tropical oriole (Icterus icterus).

48. Visual classification of feral cat Felis silvestris catus vocalizations.

49. Not just the river: genes, shapes, and sounds reveal population-structured diversification in the Amazonian frog Allobates tapajos (Dendrobatoidea).

50. Sound attenuation in forest and roadside environments: Implications for avian point-count surveys.

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