Björn M. Siemers
Affiliations: | Animal Physiology | University of Tuebingen, Germany, Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany | |
Sensory Ecology | MPI for Ornithology |
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"Björn Siemers"Children
Sign in to add traineeAnne Leonie Baier | research assistant | 2006-2012 | Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Seewiesen (Neurotree) |
Holger R. Goerlitz | grad student |
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Publications
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Sommer RS, Hofreiter M, Krüger F, et al. (2019) Preliminary results on the molecular study of fish-eating by "trawling Myotis" bat species in Europe Vertebrate Zoology. 69: 83-92 |
Hügel T, van Meir V, Muñoz-Meneses A, et al. (2017) Does similarity in call structure or foraging ecology explain interspecific information transfer in wild Myotis bats? Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 71: 168 |
Greif S, Zsebők S, Schmieder D, et al. (2017) Acoustic mirrors as sensory traps for bats. Science (New York, N.Y.). 357: 1045-1047 |
Luo J, Siemers BM, Koselj K. (2015) How anthropogenic noise affects foraging. Global Change Biology |
Ruczyński I, Clarin TM, Siemers BM. (2015) Do greater mouse-eared bats experience a trade-off between energy conservation and learning? The Journal of Experimental Biology. 217: 4043-8 |
Zsebők S, Czabán D, Farkas J, et al. (2015) Acoustic species identification of shrews: Twittering calls for monitoring Ecological Informatics. 27: 1-10 |
Clarin BM, Bitzilekis E, Siemers BM, et al. (2014) Personal messages reduce vandalism and theft of unattended scientific equipment. Methods in Ecology and Evolution. 5: 125-131 |
Luo J, Koselj K, Zsebok S, et al. (2014) Global warming alters sound transmission: differential impact on the prey detection ability of echolocating bats. Journal of the Royal Society, Interface. 11: 20130961 |
Krüger F, Clare EL, Greif S, et al. (2014) An integrative approach to detect subtle trophic niche differentiation in the sympatric trawling bat species Myotis dasycneme and Myotis daubentonii. Molecular Ecology. 23: 3657-71 |
Schmieder DA, Zsebők S, Siemers BM. (2014) The tail plays a major role in the differing manoeuvrability of two sibling species of mouse-eared bats (Myotis myotis and Myotis blythii) Canadian Journal of Zoology. 92: 965-977 |