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Journal of BirdLife Australia

Articles citing this paper

The juvenile food-begging call of some fledgling cuckoos – vocal mimicry or vocal duplication by natural selection?

J. Courtney
67(2) pp.154 - 157


11 articles found in Crossref database.

Reconciling genetic expectations from host specificity with historical population dynamics in an avian brood parasite, Horsfield’s Bronze‐CuckooChalcites basalisof Australia
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Monophyly and phylogeny of cuckoos (Aves, Cuculidae) inferred from osteological characters
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Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 2000 130(2). p.263
Mimicry vs. similarity: which resemblances between brood parasites and their hosts are mimetic and which are not?
GRIM TOMÁŠ
Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 2004 84(1). p.69
Coevolution of acoustical communication between obligate avian brood parasites and their hosts
Wang Jiaojiao, Li Qihong, Yang Canchao
Avian Research. 2020 11(1).
Avian Brood Parasitism (2017)
Jamie Gabriel A., Kilner Rebecca M.
Feeding of nestling and fledgling brood parasites by individuals other than the foster parents: a review
Sealy Spencer G., Lorenzana Janice C.
Canadian Journal of Zoology. 1997 75(11). p.1739
Adult Fan-tailed Cuckoo Cuculus pyrrhophanus Feeds FLedgling
Ambrose S.J.
Emu - Austral Ornithology. 1987 87(1). p.69
Do cuckoo chicks mimic the begging calls of their hosts?
McLean Ian G., Waas Joseph R.
Animal Behaviour. 1987 35(6). p.1896
Vocal mimicry of hosts by Great Spotted Cuckoo Clamator glandarius: further evidence
REDONDO TOMAS, REYNA LUIS ARIAS DE
Ibis. 1988 130(6). p.540
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